Thomas Jefferson Tower: Difference between revisions

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The '''Thomas Jefferson Tower''' (formerly the [[Thomas Jefferson Hotel]], Cabana Hotel, and [[Leer Tower]]) is a 19-story apartment building, originally opened in [[1929]] as a 300-room hotel, on the southwest corner of [[2nd Avenue North]] and [[17th Street North|17th Street]] on the western side of downtown [[Birmingham]].
The '''Thomas Jefferson Tower''' (formerly the [[Thomas Jefferson Hotel]], Cabana Hotel, and [[Leer Tower]]) is a 19-story apartment building, originally opened in [[1929]] as a 300-room hotel, on the southwest corner of [[2nd Avenue North]] and [[17th Street North|17th Street]] on the western side of downtown [[Birmingham]].


The hotel was planned and developed by the [[Union Realty Company]], headed by [[Henry Cobb]]. It was designed by [[David O. Whilldin]] and constructed for $2.5 million. It opened in September 1919 with a week-long gala. Among the building's features were an ornate marble lobby, a large ballroom, and a rooftop mooring mast intended for use by dirigibles.
The hotel was planned and developed by the [[Union Realty Company]], headed by [[Henry Cobb]]. It was designed by [[David O. Whilldin]] and constructed for $2.5 million. It opened in September 1919 with a week-long gala. Among the building's features were an ornate marble lobby, a large ballroom, and a rooftop "air beacon" widely believed to represent a "mooring mast" for airships.


The hotel spent decades as one of Birmingham's nicer properties, hosting two presidents and many other luminaries. By the mid-1970s, though, it was beginning to show its age as newer hotels like the [[Parliament House]] and [[Hilton House]] opened. Fires damaged the building in [[1980]] and [[1981]], and the property went into foreclosure and was condemned in [[1983]]. It was bought at auction, with the owners leasing some of the ground floor retail spaces, until going back up for sale in [[2002]]. In [[2004]], [[Operation New Birmingham]] put it on their [[12 Most Wanted]] list of downtown buildings in need of renovation.
The hotel spent decades as one of Birmingham's nicer properties, hosting two presidents and many other luminaries. By the mid-1970s, though, it was beginning to show its age as newer hotels like the [[Parliament House]] and [[Hilton House]] opened. Fires damaged the building in [[1980]] and [[1981]], and the property went into foreclosure and was condemned in [[1983]]. It was bought at auction, with the owners leasing some of the ground floor retail spaces, until going back up for sale in [[2002]]. In [[2004]], [[Operation New Birmingham]] put it on their [[12 Most Wanted]] list of downtown buildings in need of renovation.
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[[Stewart Perry Construction]] was contracted to perform the renovation work. An exterior construction elevator was installed in May [[2015]] and the "Leer Tower" sign was dismantled and removed shortly afterward.
[[Stewart Perry Construction]] was contracted to perform the renovation work. An exterior construction elevator was installed in May [[2015]] and the "Leer Tower" sign was dismantled and removed shortly afterward.
The new apartment building officially reopened in December 2016, with floors 14 through 20 complete, and nine of the total 96 units occupied by the end of January 2017. The building features a 350-person ballroom for events.
In January [[2024]] an affiliate of Basis Management Group of New York City acquired the tower and an adjacent commercial building out of foreclosure for $16.56 million. The seller was affiliated with Prager Private Equity of Atlanta, Georgia.
==Tenants==
* [[Roots & Revelry]], 2017-
* [[Vineyard Food Market]], 2018-


==References==
==References==
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* Poe, Ryan (August 8, 2013) "[http://www.bizjournals.com/birmingham/news/2013/08/08/thomas-jefferson-tower-brian-beshara.html Investors buy Thomas Jefferson Tower for $1M]" {{BBJ}}
* Poe, Ryan (August 8, 2013) "[http://www.bizjournals.com/birmingham/news/2013/08/08/thomas-jefferson-tower-brian-beshara.html Investors buy Thomas Jefferson Tower for $1M]" {{BBJ}}
* Tomberlin, Michael (January 22, 2014) "Birmingham's Thomas Jefferson Tower wins initial Design Review Committee approval." {{BN}}
* Tomberlin, Michael (January 22, 2014) "Birmingham's Thomas Jefferson Tower wins initial Design Review Committee approval." {{BN}}
* Poe, Kelly (July 22, 2016) "[https://www.newslibrary.com/newspapers/news/15E527BD6845C4C8 See what Bear Bryant's old suite looks like today as part of Thomas Jefferson Tower redevelopment]" {{BN}}
* Poe, Kelly (January 26, 2017) "[https://www.newslibrary.com/newspapers/news/1622D355A0612388 See the progress on Thomas Jefferson Tower after first residents move in]" {{BN}}
* Parker, Illyshia (January 8, 2024) "Thomas Jefferson Tower trades hands in $16M deal." {{BBJ}}
==External links==
* [https://www.tjtower.com Thomas Jefferson Tower]
* [https://www.tjtowerevents.com TJ Tower Events]


[[Category:Thomas Jefferson Tower|*]]
[[Category:Thomas Jefferson Tower|*]]
[[Category:Apartment buildings]]
[[Category:Apartment buildings]]
[[Category:2016 establishments]]
[[Category:2016 establishments]]

Latest revision as of 11:20, 13 January 2024

This article is about the former hotel on Birmingham's north side. For the UAB Hospital building, see Jefferson Tower.
The Thomas Jefferson Hotel in 1949. Photo by A. C. Keily. courtesy BPL Archives

The Thomas Jefferson Tower (formerly the Thomas Jefferson Hotel, Cabana Hotel, and Leer Tower) is a 19-story apartment building, originally opened in 1929 as a 300-room hotel, on the southwest corner of 2nd Avenue North and 17th Street on the western side of downtown Birmingham.

The hotel was planned and developed by the Union Realty Company, headed by Henry Cobb. It was designed by David O. Whilldin and constructed for $2.5 million. It opened in September 1919 with a week-long gala. Among the building's features were an ornate marble lobby, a large ballroom, and a rooftop "air beacon" widely believed to represent a "mooring mast" for airships.

The hotel spent decades as one of Birmingham's nicer properties, hosting two presidents and many other luminaries. By the mid-1970s, though, it was beginning to show its age as newer hotels like the Parliament House and Hilton House opened. Fires damaged the building in 1980 and 1981, and the property went into foreclosure and was condemned in 1983. It was bought at auction, with the owners leasing some of the ground floor retail spaces, until going back up for sale in 2002. In 2004, Operation New Birmingham put it on their 12 Most Wanted list of downtown buildings in need of renovation.

In 2005 David Leer of Modesto, California announced a $20 million project to renovate the building as condominiums. It took two years to clear a contested title to the building, dubbed "Leer Tower," in new neon-lit signs that were installed in the summer of 2007. The project failed, however, and returned to foreclosure, saddled with liens, in June 2008.

Alabama's Historic Tax Credit program, signed into law in 2013, opened the door for renewed redevelopment efforts. An investment group headed by Brian Beshara of New Orleans, Louisiana paid $1 million for the building and presented plans for a 100-unit apartment conversion anchored by a restaurant and event center. Their plans were given preliminary approval by the Birmingham Design Review Committee in January 2014.

Stewart Perry Construction was contracted to perform the renovation work. An exterior construction elevator was installed in May 2015 and the "Leer Tower" sign was dismantled and removed shortly afterward.

The new apartment building officially reopened in December 2016, with floors 14 through 20 complete, and nine of the total 96 units occupied by the end of January 2017. The building features a 350-person ballroom for events.

In January 2024 an affiliate of Basis Management Group of New York City acquired the tower and an adjacent commercial building out of foreclosure for $16.56 million. The seller was affiliated with Prager Private Equity of Atlanta, Georgia.

Tenants

References

External links