Hotel Aragon Explained

The Hotel Aragon was a six-story, 125-room hotel at 169 Peachtree Street NE, at the southeast corner of Ellis Street in Atlanta, in what is today the Peachtree Center area of downtown. It was a major addition to the city's hotel capacity at its completion in 1892,[1] cost $250,000,[2] and was built and owned by George Washington Collier.[3] It was the only major hotel in the city not adjacent to Union Station. A 1902 guidebook describes the Aragon as one of three first-class hotels in the city, together with the Kimball House and the Majestic Hotel.[2]

In the late 1920s a project was started to raze the Aragon in order to build a Modernist 750-room hotel for the Dinkler Hotel Company. The plans by architect Francis Palmer Smith of firm Pringle & Smith showed "a proud monument of spirited Deco design, a Modernistic setback block rising twenty floors to a central tower". The project stalled.[4] Instead, the hotel was razed to make way for the more modest Collier Building (1932), though still with Art Deco ornamentation. That building was in turn razed in the 1970s. The site is now occupied by an entrance to the MARTA Peachtree Center station and part of the Georgia Pacific Center.[5] [6]

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References

33.7582°N -84.3873°W

Notes and References

  1. Atlanta Constitution, November 15, 1892
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=EUgUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA106 Atlanta and Its Builders: A Comprehensive History of the Gate City, Volume 2, Thomas H. Martin, pp. 106 and 472-3
  3. Web site: Atlanta History Center . 2012-11-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130708051450/http://album.atlantahistorycenter.com/store/Products/79801-aragon-hotel.aspx . 2013-07-08 . dead .
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=Dbi6NUWMzAAC&pg=PA40 Atlanta Architecture: Art Deco to Modern Classic, 1929-1959, Volume 1, Robert Michael Craig, p.40
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=l-3GahRYq9UC&pg=PA134 The Architecture of Francis Palmer Smith, Atlanta's Scholar-Architect, Robert M. Craig, p.134
  6. http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/ugapressbks/pdfs/ugp9780820334776.pdf Peachtree Street, Atlanta, William Williford, p.138