Medical Arts Building: Difference between revisions

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In the 1980s the building was converted into the [[Pickwick Hotel]] by developer [[Donald Kahn]]. [[Kidd/Plosser/Sprague]] designed the renovations which were carried out by [[Brasfield & Gorrie]]. Kahn also redeveloped the area behind the hotel into a retail and restaurant district called [[Pickwick Place]], constructing a four-story parking deck to serve both. In [[2007]] the hotel was fully renovated by Long & Cox Properties, which renamed it the [[Hotel Highland]].
In the 1980s the building was converted into the [[Pickwick Hotel]] by developer [[Donald Kahn]]. [[Kidd/Plosser/Sprague]] designed the renovations which were carried out by [[Brasfield & Gorrie]]. Kahn also redeveloped the area behind the hotel into a retail and restaurant district called [[Pickwick Place]], constructing a four-story parking deck to serve both. In [[2007]] the hotel was fully renovated by Long & Cox Properties, which renamed it the [[Hotel Highland]].
==Tenants==
* basement
** [[Medical Arts Brace Shop]] (1946)
** [[Medical Arts Garage]] (1946)
* lobby
** [[Southeastern Optical Co.]] (1946)
* 2nd floor
** 201–212: [[Meadows & Kesmodel]] physicians (1946)
** 214–222: [[Sherrill & Conwell]] physicians (1946)
* 3rd floor
** 301–305: [[William Rosser]] physician (1946)
** 306–310: [[Harry Bradford]] / [[Patton Bradford]] dentists (1946)
** 311-314: [[Jerome Meyer]] physician (1946)
** 315–317: [[Robert Cothran]] physician (1946)
** 318: [[Brown Linder]] physician (1946)
** 322: [[Virgil Heard]] dentist (1946)
* 4th floor
** 402–407: [[Thomas Magruder]] / [[Frank Wilson]] physicians (1946)
** 408–409: [[James Ferry]] physician (1946)
** 410–412: [[Vivian Cooper]] dentist (1946)
** 414-417: [[Charles King]] physician (1946)
** 418–420: [[D. Lawson Massey]] dentist (1946)
** 421–422: [[Ralph Griffin]] dentist (1946)
* 5th floor
** 501–505: [[Gilbert Fisher]] physician (1946)
** 506–508: [[Jaratt Robertson]] physician (1946)
** 510–512: [[Frank Kay]] physician (1946)
** 514–517: [[S. Sellers Underwood]] physician (1946)
** 518–522: [[William Beddow]] physician (1946)
* 6th floor
** 601–604: [[Levert Gravlee]] / [[James Gravlee]] dentists (1946)
** 605–608: [[Arthur Harris]] physician (1946)
** 609–612: [[Claude Ford]] / [[Bert Wiesel]] physicians (1946)
** 614–622: [[Joseph Hirsh]] physician (1946)
* 7th floor
** 701–711: [[Scott, McQuiddy & Collins]] physicians (1946)
** 712–728: [[Belford Lester]] / [[H. B. Morris]] physicians (1946)
* 8th floor
** 801–802: [[John Hillhouse]] physician (1946)
** 803–805: [[Joseph Cunningham]] physician (1946)
** 806–809: [[Frank Clements]] physician (1946)
** 810–812: [[Edward McConnell]] physician (1946)
** 814: [[Cabot Lull]] physician (1946)
** 815–822: [[James Mason]] / [[James Mason Jr]] physicians (1946)
* 9th floor
** building office


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:27, 5 June 2021

As the Hotel Highland in January 2009.

The Medical Arts Building or Medical Arts Tower is an 8-story building built at 1023 20th Street South in 1931 as medical offices. It was developed by the Kamram Grotto, a fraternal order made up of Freemasons who also built the nearby Pickwick Club in the same year. The architect was Charles H. McCauley, who studied similar developments in Atlanta, Chattanooga, Nashville and St Louis before completing the design. Construction was completed in just six months.

The brick-clad building has stone and terra-cotta ornaments as well as cast aluminum spandrels below the windows. The art-deco styling carries over into the elevator lobby where a star motif symbolizes the building's location at Five Points South. Originally the ground floor was occupied by an apothecary and other shops.

In the 1980s the building was converted into the Pickwick Hotel by developer Donald Kahn. Kidd/Plosser/Sprague designed the renovations which were carried out by Brasfield & Gorrie. Kahn also redeveloped the area behind the hotel into a retail and restaurant district called Pickwick Place, constructing a four-story parking deck to serve both. In 2007 the hotel was fully renovated by Long & Cox Properties, which renamed it the Hotel Highland.

Tenants

References

  • Burkhardt, Ann McQuorquodale and Alice Meriwether Bowsher (November 1982) "Town Within a City: The Five Points South Neighborhood 1880-1930." Journal of the Birmingham Historical Society. Vol. 7, Nos. 3-4

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