Phoenix Flies 2019 is only a year way. Here's are some places I'd enjoy seeing at the next #phoenixflies. To my knowledge they've never been on the tour.
(Here are links to the online Phoenix Flies 2018 Program, to the Phoenix Flies 2018 Event Cards, and to the Phoenix Flies 2018 Daily Calendar Cards.)
St. Paul's Presbyterian is a landmark a block from the Fox. One of our four Hopson designed churches. It's been home to several churches and a restaurant. It needs some $love.
Grace United Methodist Church by Francis Palmer Smith, big stained glass, big organ, great acoustics, muscular shoulder-pad street-front appearance, parphrasing Robert Criag who wrote the book.
Church at Ponce & Highland formerly Druid Hills Baptist is at one of Atlanta's most picturesque corners, a 100% corner - per Dhiru Thadani. By same designers at First Church of Christ Scientist.
Church at Ponce & Highland formerly Druid Hills Baptist: MUST SEE INSIDE.
Saint John Chrysostom Melkite Catholic Church was a glorious Candler Mansion, now a glorious church.
Inside Saint John Chrysostom, a high style family home that had a bowling alley.
Is the Episcopal Church of the Epiphany in the City of Atlanta? I don't know but the congregation used to meet on Seminole in Little Five Points.
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Monday, February 19, 2018
Sunday, February 18, 2018
Terry's #PhoenixFlies 2018 Curation: Awesome Churches
When folks ask me what to see during Atlanta Preservation Center's #PhoenixFlies 2018 I say the churches. There are 16 church tours this year.
I want see Northside Baptist and St. Anne's Episcopal this year and more I hope
Here are links to the online Phoenix Flies 2018 Program to the Phoenix Flies 2018 Event Cards and to the Phoenix Flies 2018 Daily Calendar Cards.
I want see Northside Baptist and St. Anne's Episcopal this year and more I hope
Here are links to the online Phoenix Flies 2018 Program to the Phoenix Flies 2018 Event Cards and to the Phoenix Flies 2018 Daily Calendar Cards.
It's big. Francis Palmer Smith's magnum opus. Stained glass by the acres. | Another Francis Palmer Smith. Two words: Hammer beams. You'll get a church tour, a stained glass tour, and some honking big organ. Sometime you go in the pipe rooms. | Not just a church tour but the current "First Existentialist Church ," aka the "Old Stone Church" goes deep. |
There's not a prouder structure on Peachtree, every brick and mortor-line has a purpose. Inside: An ethereal space with a dome. Combine this tour with Tour 40 for a same day two-fer. | Glorious stained glass with handful of Tiffany windows. Combine this tour with Tour 39 for a same day two-fer. | Glenn's main sanctuary is workaday and doubles and Emory's auditorium. The Steeple, and the dignified exterior reward every drive by. But Shutze's "Little Chapel" is a cathedral in 900 square feet. Shutze based the design on St Stephen Walbrook by Sir Christopher Wren: how to "dome a square." |
I've never visited this one but I plan to. | The octagon landmark where the Northside Drive splits with Northside Parkway. Stained glass #notliketheothers |
One of the Charles H. Hopson churches and a Peachtree landmark. Spectacular inside. Must see ceiling. | Buckhead, kind of hidden, looking forward to my first visit. | Spectacular and you'll hear the great organ. Combine this tour with Tour 90 for a same day two-fer. |
Midtown landmark at 5th and Peachtree. Must see inside. | In Granite on Grant Street in Grant Park. Have you seen it, seen inside? Stunning sanctuary. #notliketheothers | One of the three "Jesus Junction" Chruches, a tall steepled landmark in white. Yes, the congregation used to meet on Ponce de Leon. |
Shutze landmark with big-time heritage and history. The 1958 bombing is remembered in "Driving Miss Daisy," | On the St. Luke's property it pokes out into Courtland Steet. Combine this tour with Tour 80 for a same day two-fer. |
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
Enjoy Driving Slow on Ponce - Former Atlanta Highlands Church of Christ
When I'm driving Ponce de Leon these days, I'm going slow, I'm people watching, I'm architecture touring. You too?
Ponce is now a destination rather than a place you just want to get through, a good thing I think. This is how to enjoy your slow Ponce drives.
On Monday night this church conversion caught my eye so I stopped for some pictures. It's the former Atlanta Highlands Church of Christ at 985 Ponce de Leon. Though I've seen it a thousand times, I liked it Monday night.
It's a condo conversion across the street from the Ponce Library. See the curvy track lights through the left window? Can you imagine this as the balcony lobby?
I don't know anything about the church, whether it still exists, the building, or the condo conversion but I'd like to.
If Atlanta had a church street, it would be Ponce Leon. Within two blocks are Druid Hills Presbyterian, Druid Hills Baptist, and Druid Hills Methodist. And 18 more churches between the Varsity and Decatur.
Lot's of classical ideas here. Engaged portico with open pediment and giant order columns in antes, lancet windows. Dutch Bond brick pattern.
Got Gothic arches.
Capstone on the shoulders.
Think there was stained glass?
Pretty nice.
Notice the cottage court behind on Blue Ridge on the west wall of Publix?
This is how to enjoy your slow Ponce drives.
Wednesday, January 17, 2018
How to Explore Inman Park Edges While Getting a Hairdo Pt. 2 of 2 The Wisteria Block
When I'm lucky, I get to take JoAnn to the salon. While she gets her "do" done, I explore.
I was a bit anxious about leaving JoAnn hanging, and didn't realize my phone was on mute. So I decided to chance it and do Part 2. It was about 4:45.
Part 2: The four restaurants at the corner of North Highland Avenue at Colquitt: Folk Art, Il Localino, North Highland Pub, and Wisteria. The Wisteria block. (See Part 1: How to Explore Inman Park Edges While Getting a Hairdo Pt. 1 of 2 Fallen Arrows and The Dickey)
In order: Wisteria, North Highland Pub, Il Localino, Folk Art. Unless you are on foot, this is the way we see them. I'd never even walked the sidewalk, time for the Architecture Tourist to spring into action.
Why would you put four restaurants in two attached buildings? It was a mystery from my smallish town youth. Then I discovered food courts.
Folk Art is on the corner of Colquitt, has this nice sign with breakfast all day and lunch and dinner.
Folk Art is a squarish space divided into comfortable niches with a view. Lots of ways to sit. It even has some counter seats right behind me.
Cute. I want to eat there, every day.
Then Il Localino. Honestly I didn't even know it was there. It's a narrow front, can't see into the windows. It had just opened for dinner.
Good grief, it's a total red-themed, white table-clothed, attentive-waiters-in-black, Italian restaurant with three (3) dining rooms. This picture is the main dining room looking from the bar toward the front door.
Cute. I want to eat here every day too.
North Highland Pub is an 11am to 3am joint. There are always folks in there when I drive by.
It's deeper than it is wide with tall metal tiled ceiling, brick floor with plenty of standing and elbow room.
Here's the giant Loews Grand Gone With the Wind Premier mural.
Cute, I'll have a beer and bar food every day.
Wisteria is the northern most.
It's what's for dinner.
Communal inline tables, breathing room.
I'd like to sit in this window, watch folks on the sidewalk, see everybody that enters and leaves.
Wow, an un-tagged wall.
Now you know.
Thanks for joining me. Let's eat.
(See Part 1: How to Explore Inman Park Edges While Getting a Hairdo Pt. 1 of 2 Fallen Arrows and The Dickey)
Monday, January 15, 2018
How to Explore Inman Park Edges While Getting a Hairdo Pt. 1 of 2 Fallen Arrows and The Dickey
When I'm lucky, I get to take JoAnn to the salon. While she gets her "do" done, I explore.
I know what you are thinking: It's way easier to wait in the car, listen to sports talk, and do Instagram. But I am the Architecture Tourst after all and I can't do three things at once anyway. (See Part 2:
How to Explore Inman Park Edges While Getting a Hairdo Pt. 2 of 2 The Wisteria Block)
On Wednesday it was "The Dickey" / Fallen Arrows block and then the four restaurants at the corner of North Highland Avenue at Colquitt: Folk Art, Il Localino, North Highland Pub, and Wisteria. The restaurants be in part 2 of 2.
What is The Dickey? They are rehabbing a warehouse at 900 Dekalb, making a place for office lofts and restaurants, yoga, and the like. The Giving Kitchen and UrbanTrans are already there. Looks cool but who is Dickey?
Delta, Edgwood, Waverly, and Dekalb Avenue make an interesting block. Edgewood is one of the finest streets in Atlanta. DeKalb is a warehouse row that fronts Hulsey Yard and a hair-raising speedway of a street.
Fallen Arrows in on Waverly.
Right here.
In here.
Here's The Dickey. They've removed some brick to open the place up leaving some mural parts behind.
GregMike mural part on the left.
Mural parts.
This is the view from Dekalb traveling West.
Mild mannered sign at 900 Dekalb.
Tag bonanza.
Mural on the wall with diamond windows.
I think this may be a restaurant area with a view.
UrbanTrans has been working out of here for a year or so.
With a stimulating working environment.
This room is big.
I don't know what that says.
They cut the brick away, put in some nice steel to hold it up. There's a covered walkway then the glass fronted rooms. I think this one may have do Yoga.
That's my bit on the Dickey and Fallen Arrows.
See Part 2: How to Explore Inman Park Edges While Getting a Hairdo Pt. 2 of 2 The Wisteria Block