29th Avenue South
29th Avenue South is a three-block (1/4-mile) long street in the Homewood Central Business District. The three-lane, east-west road runs from 18th Street South in the west to Independence Drive (U.S. Highway 31) in the east. It features both angled, forward parking and parallel parking at various points along the road sides.
29th Avenue was originally part of Montgomery Highway (U.S. Highway 31). From a southbound perspective, the highway curved east from 18th Street (although 18th continued south) to travel along 29th Avenue to what is now Independence Drive, where it curved south again. Highway 31 was rerouted to the Elton B. Stephens Expressway, once the Red Mountain cut was completed in 1970. The western curve at 18th was converted to a standard T-intersection in the 1990s.
Notable locations
- For an alphabetical list of locations, see the 29th Avenue South category.
- 18th Street South intersection (road terminus)
- North side:
- The Curve
- 1802: Collage
- 1804: Oyama Karate
- 1808: former location of Your Kidding, Eighteenth Street Orientals (1990-2017)
- 1818: former location of the Domino Lounge
- 1820: former location of Toranto Bros. wholesale shoes (1956)
- 1826: former location of Chic Coiffeures (1969)
- 1830: SoHo Square
- The Curve
- South side:
- 1809: former location of Homewood Grill (1940)
- 1811: former location of Monty Stabler Galleries, The Hogue-Lacey Company (1940)
- 1817
- 1817-A: Saxx Hair Design
- 1817-B: Centuries
- 1819: Dave's Pizza (former location of Happi)
- 1825-B: Generation Dog
- 1829: Eighteenth Street Orientals (2018-), former location of AMW/Briarcliff Shop
- 1831: Kathy's Designer Kitchens
- 1833: Homewood Police Department
- North side:
- 19th Street South intersection
- North side:
- 1900: BB&T branch, formerly Colonial Bank
- 1906: former location of Pasquale's Pizza
- 1920: Urban Cookhouse (2018-), former location of Classic Wine Company, proposed location of Farm Bowl & Juice Co. (2018)
- 1922: Real & Rosemary restaurant (March 2016-)
- South side:
- 1903: Aloft Birmingham SoHo Square, former location of Homewood City Hall
- North side:
- 19th Place South intersection (north only)
- North side:
- 1924: Williams & Elliott Attorneys
- 1926: Big Bad Breakfast (2016-), Red Lion Lounge, former location of Lafitte Restaurant and Mammy's Pancakes (1960s-), Cathay Inn (1988)
- 1930: Independence Plaza, former location of Vulcan Motor Lodge
- South side:
- 1917: Audio Video Excellence (AVX)
- 1923: McKinney Technologies, former location of Cafe.Mac
- 1925: Palmer's Lamps
- 1927: Pastry Art Bake Shoppe, former location of Earrol's Coiffures
- 1931: Sanctuary, former location of Little Southerner Supper Club (1937-1951)
- North side:
- Independence Drive intersection (road terminus)