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Ponce City Market
Ponce City Market under renovation, May 2012
Ponce City Market tower, May 2012
Ponce City Market tower, May 2012
General information
Address 675 Ponce de Leon Ave. NE
Town or city Atlanta, Georgia
Country USA
Coordinates 33°46′22″N 84°21′57″W / 33.7729°N 84.3657°W / 33.7729; -84.3657
Inaugurated 1926
Renovated currently under renovation
Technical details
Other dimensions 2.1 million sq. ft. (approx.)
Design and construction
Owner Jamestown
Architecture firm Nimmons, Carr and Wright, Architects (Chicago)

Ponce City Market is a historic building in Atlanta, located where the BeltLine crosses Ponce de Leon Avenue in the Old Fourth Ward where that neighborhood touches the Virginia Highland, Poncey-Highland and Midtown neighborhoods. The 2,100,000-square-foot (200,000 m2) building, one of the largest by volume in the Southeast United States, was used by Sears, Roebuck and Co. from 1926–1987 and later by the City of Atlanta as "City Hall East". The building's lot is 16 acres (65,000 m2) large.

The City sold the property for $27 million to Jamestown, Jamestown, a private-equity group, on July 11, 2011.[1] Jamestown, which also invested in the redevelopment of the White Provision retail and restaurant complex in West Midtown, is bankrolling 180-million-dollar plans by developer Green Street Properties to convert it into a mixed-use development with national and local retail anchors, restaurants, boutiques and offices, and residential.[2] In a July 2011 interview, Michael Phillips, managing director of Jamestown, said that Jamestown is focused on Ponce City Market becoming the fourth nationally relevant food hall in the U.S., alongside Pike Place in Seattle, the Ferry Building in San Francisco, and Jamestown's own Chelsea Market in New York. Jamestown also plans rooftop gardens where local restaurants can grow food.[3] Jamestown plans to complete renovations by early 2014 and then have the building added to the National Register of Historic Places.


It is hoped that the new development, along with the new adjacent BeltLine trail and Historic Fourth Ward Park, will stitch together the four neighborhoods that meet where it is located and revitalize the Ponce de Leon Avenue corridor.[4][5]

Contents

History[edit]

The building was built on the site of Ponce de Leon Springs, later the whites-only Ponce de Leon amusement park.

  • From 1926-1979 it was a Sears, Roebuck and Co. retail store, warehouse and regional office[6] The Atlanta regional headquarters was closely linked to Sears' efforts to capture the market of Southern famers through the Sears Agricultural Foundation:
    • From August 1926 until October 1928, the Foundation hosted a radio show, broadcast from the Atlanta Sears tower called “Dinner Bell R.F.D.”. R.F.D. stood for the club "Radio Farmers' Democracy. The show aired on WSB radio between noon and 1 pm three times a week, featuring old-time musicians and string bands[7]
    • Sears held a farmer's market at the back of the property starting in May 1930 through New Year's Day 1947[7]
    • In 1939, the market hosted the First Georgia Clay Products Show, which garnered an audience of 5,000[7]
    • The market established partnerships with local 4-H Clubs and Future Farmers of America clubs
Ponce City Market in 2007
  • In 1979 the retail store closed but the building continue operating as a Sears regional office until 1987.
  • In May, 1990[8] the city of Atlanta bought the building for $12 million, with plans to place 2,000 police and fire employees there, and later rent space out to county, state, and federal agencies. Only one floor was ever occupied by the Atlanta police in addition to a ground-floor art gallery.
  • From 1995-1999 the Southeastern Flower Show was held here.[9]
  • The building was closed to the public on March 29, 2010 and remains closed pending development by Jamestown.
  • In August 2012 a coffee house, Dancing Goats, opened in a temporary location at the southwest corner of the site in the renovated Sears auto service center building, which also houses the Jamestown offices.[10]

External links[edit]

History[edit]

Redevelopment[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Mayor Signs Closing Documents on Sale of City Hall East", pbaonline, July 1, 2011
  2. ^ "Slideshow: Jamestown reveals Ponce City Market", Atlanta Business Journal, June 29, 2011
  3. ^ "Jamestown’s Michael Phillips on Ponce City Market", ATL Food Chatter (Atlanta magazine blog), July 18, 2011
  4. ^ "Landmark Sears building still faces hurdles", Atlanta Journal-Constitution, June 1, 2010
  5. ^ Ken Edelstein, "Green Street, Jamestown hope to close City Hall East deal this month", Green Building Chronicle, 2011-03-03
  6. ^ "Timeline: Old Sears building, once a boom, then a bust", Atlanta Journal-Constitution, June 1, 2010
  7. ^ a b c Jerry R. Hancock, Jr., Dixie Progress: Sears, Roebuck & Co. and How it became an Icon in Southern Culture, Georgia State University
  8. ^ "National Notebook: Atlanta; Sears Center bought by city", The New York Times, June 2, 1991
  9. ^ http://www.tripsmarter.com/travelinfo/atlanta/events/southeastern-flower-show
  10. ^ "Ponce City Market to welcome first tenant", Atlanta Business Chronicle, Amy Wenk, August 9, 2012

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponce_City_Market — Please support Wikipedia.
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3352 videos foundNext > 

Ponce City Market: A Development Born of Integrity

Learn more about the history of Ponce City Market, and what we are planning on doing with this historic structure in the future.

Ponce City Market - Skyscraper Construction - Old Fourth Ward Atlanta - 2/21/13

Ponce City Market: This 2100000-square-foot (200000 m2) building, one of the largest by volume in the Southeast United States, was used by Sears, Roebuck ...

Sneak Peek Into Ponce City Market

October 7, 2012.

Ponce City Market tunnel to the Atlanta BeltLine Eastside Trail

The BeltLine Team met up with folks from Jamestown and Greenstreet Properties for a quick tour from Ponce City Market (formerly City Hall East) through the t...

Ponce City Market Fly Through

If you have been wondering what Ponce City Market will look like when it is completed, look no further! This Fly Through is designed to give you a glimpse in...

Ponce City Market - Dancing Goats Coffee Bar Opening Day

On August 17th, 2012 Dancing Goats Coffee Bar became the first tenant at Atlanta's Ponce City Market site. The market will not open until 2014, but Dancing G...

Time lapse view of ponce city market demolition.

Atlanta Streets Alive 2012 Time Lapse Behind Ponce City Market

2012 Atlanta Streets Alive time lapse footage from behind the Ponce City Market building on the Atlanta Beltline. Courtesy of Gnoggin Studios. Experience His...

Ponce City Market - Skyscraper Renovation - Old Forth Ward Atlanta - 4/10/13

Ponce City Market: This 2100000-square-foot (200000 m2) building, one of the largest by volume in the Southeast United States, was used by Sears, Roebuck ...

Ponce City Market - Atlanta Beltline Bridge-work at Ponce de Leon

Shows the Atlanta Beltline bridge lift at Ponce de Leon. Work will be completed in June 2012. One camera was positioned along side Kong on Paris on Ponce's E...

3352 videos foundNext > 

88 news items

 
Decatur Metro
Tue, 18 Jun 2013 07:49:53 -0700

That Ponce City Market fly-through is pretty fun to do. Especially to watch the people–the walking movements are pretty good–that's not easy to do. The men seem to all stride and many of the women have high heel walk. And every once in a while, one of ...
 
Creative Loafing Atlanta
Fri, 14 Jun 2013 12:29:49 -0700

With less than one year to go until Ponce City Market is expected to open, Jamestown Properties has continued to reveal little tidbits about how it will convert City Hall East into a mixed-used megaplex of apartments, restaurants, shops, and offices ...
 
Curbed National
Sat, 08 Jun 2013 04:22:11 -0700

Hankering to live at Ponce City Market? Better hurry. With only 250 or so apartments to be offered, our gut says you might be wise to reserve a place in line now. (Then again, options in the area are rapidly multiplying). Jamestown Properties, the ...
 
Curbed National
Thu, 06 Jun 2013 03:45:41 -0700

A Ponce City Market honcho likened Atlanta's most massive repurposing project to a southern-fried version of Chelsea Market in an interview this week with a New York City real estate news outlet. Michael Phillips, Jamestown Properties chief operating ...

Creative Loafing Atlanta

Creative Loafing Atlanta
Mon, 17 Jun 2013 15:36:18 -0700

The location replaces City Gallery East, the OCA's old arts space located in City Hall East (now known as Ponce City Market), which the city sold in July 2011. When AJC parent company Cox Enterprises gifted the 72 Marietta Street building to the city ...
 
atlantadailyworld
Tue, 18 Jun 2013 15:32:22 -0700

The new gallery will replace an older version, City Gallery East, which is now located in Ponce City Market. When the old AJC space was given to the city in 2010, Mayor Kasim Reed insisted it be used to house a new art gallery. Stanley, Beaman & Sears ...
 
Curbed National
Mon, 17 Jun 2013 11:52:59 -0700

The 250 Piedmont Ave. project would join Ponce City Market, the nine-story 550 Pharr Road building in Buckhead, and an abandoned hotel downtown that are being converted to apartments or student housing. Could this finally be downtown's turn to score ...
 
Curbed National
Thu, 30 May 2013 04:26:33 -0700

Lost amid all the chatter about the smorgasbord of intriguing intown projects — Ponce City Market, the Beltline, the Atlanta Streetcar, the Falcons stadium, the list goes and goes — is talk of Buckhead Atlanta, the half-decade-in-the-making redux of ...
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