Flowers Building Explained

Flowers Building
Location:101 12th St., Columbus, Georgia
Coordinates:32.4686°N -84.9917°W
Built:1902
Architect:T. Firth Lockwood
Architecture:Chicago
Added:September 29, 1980
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:80001156

The Flowers Building is a historic building constructed in 1902 in Columbus, Georgia. Its Chicago style design is by architect T. Firth Lockwood. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It has also been known as the Flowers Building.

It is a four-story Chicago school-style commercial building.

The building was deemed significant "as a turn-of-the-century Masonic Temple, which later became a major commercial center in downtown Columbus, housing offices of leading professionals and businessmen", and as "the only example of the Chicago Commercial building in town. It is Sullivanesque in the use of the tall vertical pilasters and over all upward thrust of the facades. It also shows some influence of John Wellborn Root in its Romanesque detailing, such as the granite piers on the first floor, the rounded arches on the 3rd floor, and the heavy cornice on the parapet."[1]

The building was constructed in 1902 as meeting hall for local Masonic lodges (with commercial retail and office space rented on the floors not occupied by the Masons). The Masons sold the building to a Mr. Flowers in 1940 and moved to the Columbus Masonic Center, 1127 2nd Ave, Columbus, GA .[2] [3] Under his ownership it was used as an office building.[3] Miller & Gallman Developers later converted it into an apartment complex.[3]

Columbian Lodge (as an organization) was chartered in 1828.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=80001156}} Historic Resources of Columbus, Muscogee County: Columbian Lodge No. 7 Free and Accepted Masons / Flowers Building ]. National Park Service. Nancy Alexander . Roger Harris . 1980 . June 2, 2018. With
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20110726220913/http://cvrlsarchives.org/?p=digitallibrary%2Fdigitalcontent&id=191 Chattahoochee Valley Libraries, Archives website
  3. Web site: Uptown Loft Tour, April 28, 2012 . Uptown Columbus . August 31, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140306230742/http://www.uptownlofttour.com/plaintext/lofts/lofts.aspx . March 6, 2014 . dead .
  4. http://georgiainfo.galileo.usg.edu/topics/historical_markers/county/muscogee/columbian-lodge-no.-7-free-accepted-masons-columbus-georgia Historic marker