Renovations Are Underway At South Buckhead Midcentury Icon

1776 Peachtree to get restaurant space, rooftop deck, outdoor dining, interior renovations.

1776 Peachtree to get restaurant space, rooftop deck, outdoor dining, interior renovations.

Another building in South Buckhead’s smorgasbord of midcentury buildings is slated for changes.

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Banners have been displayed recently at 1776 Peachtree, along 26th Street in Brookwood, showing off a new rendering and advertising space at the property.

In addition to extensive interior renovations, proposed changes include a “grab-n-go café,” “sundry shop,” the addition of a chef driven restaurant with outdoor dining, and a rooftop deck, according to the building’s website.

Construction will commence this summer. Lobby renovations and “added amenities” are planned to be finished at the end of 2016.

1776 Peachtree was sold last year to TPA Group LLC after being purchased in early 2014 by HighBrook Investment Management for $11,050,000.

Almost a third of a mile away, another midcentury icon, the Sheffield Medical office building, is slated for demolition to make way for a $500 million new Piedmont Healthcare building. How long before the low-slung condo building across 26th Street gets replaced by a more design forward number?

1776 Peachtree
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Image on right via 1776 Peachtree website
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Image via 1776 Peachtree website

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Image via 1776 Peachtree website
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Image by Julia Sirb

What do you think of the building’s design? Tell us below…

Julia Sirb

Julia Sirb

Julia studied Urban Planning and Economic Development at GSU's School of Policy Studies. She is interested in the way a city's built environment, policy decisions, and economy work together to shape its culture. When not typing, she's writing calligraphy or looking for the next great shot through the lens of her medium format film camera.
Julia Sirb

Julia Sirb

Julia studied Urban Planning and Economic Development at GSU's School of Policy Studies. She is interested in the way a city's built environment, policy decisions, and economy work together to shape its culture. When not typing, she's writing calligraphy or looking for the next great shot through the lens of her medium format film camera.

3 Responses

  1. We tear down anything interesting- I understand that sometimes current layouts don’t work with today’s business but Atlanta is begining to look all glass and steel. Not very unique

  2. It would be great if the new chef driven restaurant, would be on the same level as the iconic, Coach & Six. Our neighborhood, Brookwood, needs quality up-scale dining destination.

  3. Leave the “low-slung” condominium building across the street alone. It is a classic wonderful (formerly apartment) building with great units of nice scale and size.

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