20th Street North: Difference between revisions

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The street in front of [[Birmingham City Hall]] on the west side of Linn Park is called '''Short 20th Street'''. It once continued past [[Boutwell Auditorium|Municipal Auditorium]] and the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] to the present site of the [[Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Center]]. After the [[I-20]]/[[I-59|59]] bridge was built, this section was closed to traffic and eventually converted into a landscaped walk and fountain. There are other short sections of the street in [[North Birmingham]], north of [[Oak Hill Cemetery]] and near [[Finley Boulevard]].  
The street in front of [[Birmingham City Hall]] on the west side of Linn Park is called '''Short 20th Street'''. It once continued past [[Boutwell Auditorium|Municipal Auditorium]] and the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] to the present site of the [[Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Center]]. After the [[I-20]]/[[I-59|59]] bridge was built, this section was closed to traffic and eventually converted into a landscaped walk and fountain. There are other short sections of the street in [[North Birmingham]], north of [[Oak Hill Cemetery]] and near [[Finley Boulevard]].  


==Notable Locations==
==Notable Locations (south to north)==
*2: [[Two North Twentieth]] building
** [[Railraod Reservation]]
** [[Morris Avenue]] intersection
*2: [[Two North Twentieth]] building (former [[Relay House]], [[Linn's Park]], and [[L & N Station]])
*3: former [[Elyton Land Company]]
*17: [[Superior Bank]]
*17: [[Superior Bank]]
*[[1st Avenue North]] intersection: [[Heaviest Corner on Earth]]
*[[1st Avenue North]] intersection: [[Heaviest Corner on Earth]]
Line 15: Line 18:
** [[Brown Marx Building]] (former site of [[First National Bank Building]])
** [[Brown Marx Building]] (former site of [[First National Bank Building]])
** [[John A. Hand Building]]
** [[John A. Hand Building]]
*113: [[Cafe Dupont]]
* 113: [[Cafe Dupont]]
*121: [[New York Style Delicatessen]]
* 117: [[King Tut Deli]]
*[[2nd Avenue North]] intersection
* 121: [[New York Style Delicatessen]]
**[[Frank Nelson Building]]
* 123: [[Bromberg's]]
*205: [[Roma's Italian Bistro]]
* [[2nd Avenue North]] intersection
*216:  Quizno's Subs
* 200: [[Roden Block]] ([[Parisian]])
*301: [[Watts Building]], [[Renasant Bank]] branch
* 201: [[Frank Nelson Building]] ([[Birmingham School of Law]])
*313: [[Roly Poly Sandwiches]]
* 205: [[Roma's Italian Bistro]]
*417: [[Regions Center]]
* 216:  Quizno's Subs
*420: [[Wachovia Tower]]
* [[3rd Avenue North]] intersection
*505: [[Financial Center Building]], [[Compass Bank]] branch
* 301: [[Watts Building]], [[Renasant Bank]] branch
* 313: [[Roly Poly Sandwiches]]
* [[4th Avenue North]] intersection
* 417: [[Regions Center]]
* 420: [[Wachovia Tower]]
* [[5th Avenue North]] intersection
* 505: [[Financial Center Building]], [[Compass Bank]] branch
* [[Park Place]] intersection
* [[Park Place]] intersection
**[[Linn Park]]
** [[Linn Park]]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 15:00, 27 February 2007

20th Street North, also known as Birmingham Green, is a north-south street in the center of downtown Birmingham which functions as Birmingham's "main street".

20th Street begins at the northern end of 20th Street South at the Railroad Reservation. From there it first crosses Morris Avenue, and then continues for seven blocks to Park Place where it is terminated by Linn Park.

Birmingham Green was a project covering those seven blocks which was completed in 1973. The project involved removing utility lines below street level and enhancing the street with tree planters, flower beds, and wide sidewalks. Parking on 20th Street is restricted mainly to loading zones. The $5 million cost was paid for by local business owners, as well as local and federal governments.

The street in front of Birmingham City Hall on the west side of Linn Park is called Short 20th Street. It once continued past Municipal Auditorium and the Birmingham Museum of Art to the present site of the Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Center. After the I-20/59 bridge was built, this section was closed to traffic and eventually converted into a landscaped walk and fountain. There are other short sections of the street in North Birmingham, north of Oak Hill Cemetery and near Finley Boulevard.

Notable Locations (south to north)

References

  • Birmingham Area Chamber of Commerce (1976) Century Plus: A Bicentennial Portrait of Birmingham, Alabama 1976 Birmingham: Oxmoor Press, p. 16.