Jefferson Home Furniture building: Difference between revisions

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The '''Jefferson Home Furniture Building''' is a six story building located at 1716 [[2nd Avenue North]].
The '''Jefferson Home Furniture building''' is a six story commercial building located at 1716 [[2nd Avenue North]].


The building, built in [[1915]], was the home of [[Cain Furniture]] by the 1920s. It became the home of the [[Joiner Furniture Co.]] in [[1944]], then of [[Duke Brothers Furniture]] in August [[1945]]. It was renovated with a sheet-metal facade in the 1960s by [[Jefferson Home Furniture]].
The building, built in [[1915]], was the home of [[J. E. Cain Furniture]] by the 1920s. It became the home of the [[Joiner Furniture Co.]] in [[1944]], then of [[Duke Brothers Furniture]] in August [[1945]]. It was renovated with a sheet-metal facade in the 1960s by [[Jefferson Home Furniture]].


In [[2004]] [[Operation New Birmingham]] put it on their [[12 Most Wanted]] list of downtown buildings in need of renovation. In [[2006]], [[Jeremy Erdreich]], owner of the building, planned to create 23 condos (to be called '''Jefferson Lofts'''). That plan was not realized until [[2014]] when the facade was removed and the project was approved for Alabama's "[[historic rehabilitation tax credit]]" program.
In [[2004]] [[Operation New Birmingham]] put it on their [[12 Most Wanted]] list of downtown buildings in need of renovation. In [[2006]], [[Jeremy Erdreich]] of [[Metropolitan LLC]], the owner of the building, planned to create 23 condos (to be called '''Jefferson Lofts'''). That plan was not realized.
 
In [[2014]] the front windows were removed for replacement, and the project was approved for Alabama's "[[historic rehabilitation tax credit]]" program. The redevelopment stalled, however, and the property was sold in May [[2016]] to 2nd Avenue Partners LLC, a group headed by [[John Chapman]], for $1.11 million.
 
In August [[2018]] Chapman submitted a proposal to the [[Birmingham Design Review Committee]] to renovate the building and the adjacent three-story building into a 64,000 square-foot self-storage facility. The $3.5 million renovation was designed by [[KPS Group]].


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==References==
==References==
* Tomberlin, Michael (February 13, 2011) "Downtown dreams: Renovation slow for prominent buildings." {{BN}}
* Tomberlin, Michael (February 13, 2011) "Downtown dreams: Renovation slow for prominent buildings." {{BN}}
* Davis, Byron (January 28, 2014) "Cain Furniture Building project to move forward with tax credit cushion ." {{BBJ}}
* Davis, Bryan (January 28, 2014) "Cain Furniture Building project to move forward with tax credit cushion ." {{BBJ}}
* Davis, Bryan (January 29, 2015) "Cain Furniture building renovation could begin this spring." {{BBJ}}
* Godwin, Brent (June 3, 2016) "A downtown building slated for apartments sold for $1M." {{BBJ}}
* West, Ty (August 29, 2018) "Storage project eyed for historic Birmingham building." {{BBJ}}


[[Category:1915 buildings]]
[[Category:1915 buildings]]
[[Category:2nd Avenue North]]
[[Category:2nd Avenue North]]
[[Category:Vacant buildings]]
[[Category:Vacant buildings]]

Revision as of 16:03, 29 August 2018

The Jefferson Home Furniture building is a six story commercial building located at 1716 2nd Avenue North.

The building, built in 1915, was the home of J. E. Cain Furniture by the 1920s. It became the home of the Joiner Furniture Co. in 1944, then of Duke Brothers Furniture in August 1945. It was renovated with a sheet-metal facade in the 1960s by Jefferson Home Furniture.

In 2004 Operation New Birmingham put it on their 12 Most Wanted list of downtown buildings in need of renovation. In 2006, Jeremy Erdreich of Metropolitan LLC, the owner of the building, planned to create 23 condos (to be called Jefferson Lofts). That plan was not realized.

In 2014 the front windows were removed for replacement, and the project was approved for Alabama's "historic rehabilitation tax credit" program. The redevelopment stalled, however, and the property was sold in May 2016 to 2nd Avenue Partners LLC, a group headed by John Chapman, for $1.11 million.

In August 2018 Chapman submitted a proposal to the Birmingham Design Review Committee to renovate the building and the adjacent three-story building into a 64,000 square-foot self-storage facility. The $3.5 million renovation was designed by KPS Group.

References