Baltimore Block Explained

Baltimore Block
Location:Atlanta, Georgia
Coordinates:33.7683°N -84.3878°W
Built:1885
Architect:Atlanta Land Improvement Co.
Added:June 3, 1976
Refnum:76000622

Baltimore Block is a series of eight rowhouses in the SoNo district of Atlanta, Georgia. Rowhouses of the kind that are abundant in Baltimore are an unusual housing type in Atlanta, where duplexes or semidetached housing, such as shotgun houses, were more common forms of high-density housing. Built in 1885 by Baltimore native Jacob J. Rosenthal, the houses were leased on long-term ground lease terms, a common practice in Baltimore. By the 1920s, the houses began to fall out of fashion, and four units were torn down while the others became derelict. A recovery began in the 1930s, and in the 1960s the area became a center of counterculture. Extensive renovation took place during the 1980s, when the units were consolidated and converted to office use.[1] [2]

Like many Baltimore houses, the brick three-story rowhouses of Baltimore Block present a unified wall-like front to the street with a continuous cornice line.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baltimore Block. GeorgiaInfo. Digital Library of Georgia. 2016-08-09.
  2. Sams, Gerald W. (ed): "AIA Guide to the Architecture of Atlanta", page 88. University of Georgia Press, 1993.