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Preservationists withdraw support for declaring Eagle historic landmark

Add this share The effort to declare the home of the former Atlanta Eagle and its neighbor historic landmarks cleared another hurdle on May 6 when the city’s Zoning Review Board approved the proposal. (Photo by Matt Hennie) The effort to declare the former home of the Atlanta Eagle a historic landmark easily passed another hurdle on Thursday – the same day the historic preservationists fueling the proposal revoked their support. The city’s Zoning Review Board quickly approved ordinances declaring two properties along Ponce de Leon Avenue – the Kodak building at 300 Ponce and the former Eagle at 306 Ponce – as landmarks. The board’s approval came after Neighborhood Planning Unit E voted to support the effort on Tuesday.

Former Eagle site could see $25 million redevelopment

Add this share The City of Atlanta hopes to declare a portion of the former Eagle as a historic landmark. (Photo by Matt Hennie) The former home of the Atlanta Eagle and its decaying neighbor next door could be the site of a new $25 million development even after portions of the existing structures are designated historic landmarks by the city. The details of what could be developed on the site emerged Thursday as the Midtown Neighbors’ Association vetted – and ultimately gave its approval to – ordinances from the City of Atlanta designating the two properties along Ponce de Leon Avenue as landmarks. 

City proposal allows portion of Eagle building to be demolished

Add this share A compromise between the City of Atlanta and the owner of the former Eagle building reduces the scope of a proposal to declare the building a historic landmark. (Photo by Matt Hennie) The City of Atlanta and the owner of two Midtown buildings – including the former home of the Atlanta Eagle – struck a deal to dramatically scale back the scope of an effort to declare the properties historic landmarks.  The terms of the compromise between Doug Young, the city’s assistant director of the Office of Design, and property owner Shahzad Hashmi were discussed publicly for the first time on Tuesday. The modifications to the proposed landmark designation for the two properties were presented during a meeting of the Land Use Committee of the Midtown Neighbors’ Association.

Effort to protect former Eagle home as landmark faces delay

Eagle owner Richard Ramey The effort to protect the 122-year-old building that once housed the Atlanta Eagle stalled on Wednesday, delaying discussion of designating it as a historic landmark for at least two weeks.  The Atlanta Urban Design Commission pressed pause after the building’s owner asked for more time to review the city’s application for landmark status. The city – and Historic Atlanta – wants to designate two buildings – 306 Ponce de Leon Avenue, which housed the Eagle until it closed in November, and 300 Ponce de Leon, vacant since the 1990s – as landmarks to protect them from being demolished. Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms jump-started the process in mid-December. But Dennis Webb – an attorney for Shahzad Hashmi, the Gwinnett psychiatrist who owns both buildings – argued that they received two city reports about the landmark designation just a week before the meeting. 

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