Avondale Commerce Park: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 24: Line 24:
** 104: [[Camfil USA]] air filters
** 104: [[Camfil USA]] air filters
** 110: [[Motion Industries]] hose & rubber
** 110: [[Motion Industries]] hose & rubber
* Building 6
** 3725: [[AmeriPride]] uniforms
** 3825: [[Whatever It Takes]]
** 116 39th Street North: [[Engine Parts Center]] piston warehouse
* Building 7 (101–121 39th Street North, demolished 2020)
*** 101: former location of [[Joiner Fire Sprinkler]] (2011)
*** 119: former location of [[MSC Industrial Supply]] (2011)
* Building 8 (100–110 40th Place North, demolished 2020)
** 100: former location of [[IHangTVs.com]] (2015–2017)
* Building 9 (105–109 40th Place North, demolished 2020)
**
* Building 10 (demolished 2020)
**
* Building 11 (101 40th Place North, demolished 2020)
** former location of [[Christ Refuge Ministry Learning Center]] (2015)
* Building 12 (demolished 2020)
**
* Building 13 (3713–3729 Messer Airport Highway)
** 3724: [[Lube Supplies & Service Inc.]] (2015–)
* Building 14
* Building 15
* Building 16 (401–419 37th Street North)
** 401: [[Inmark]]
** 409: [[Associated Equipment Co.]]
** 415: [[Coastal Construction Products]]
** 419: [[Sherwin-Williams]] commercial paints


[[Category:Avondale Commerce Park]]
[[Category:Avondale Commerce Park]]
[[Category:1980s buildings]]
[[Category:1980s buildings]]

Revision as of 14:35, 18 September 2020

The Avondale Commerce Park is a business and industrial property owned by EGS Commercial Real Estate and located on the blocks between 37th and 41st Streets, north of 1st Avenue North and south of Messer Airport Highway, the site where Avondale Mills operated from 1897 to 1971, in Birmingham's North Avondale neighborhood.

The business park was developed in the 1980s by Marc Eason, later a partner in EGS. The development consists of several separate buildings, leased by a variety of manufacturers and distributors.

In 2016 Eason and his son Adam announced that a major portion of the Commerce Park would be redeveloped as "Avondale Works", subdividing the existing spaces for smaller tenants and adding shared indoor and outdoor common spaces. That project never secured enough tenants to continue, and a residential loft development was under consideration before a major tenant signed on for a new industrial and warehouse building in 2020.

Buildings