Frank Nelson Building: Difference between revisions
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** [[Birmingham School of Law]] (1996-2012) | ** [[Birmingham School of Law]] (1996-2012) | ||
** [[Woodruff Manufacturing Company]] | ** [[Woodruff Manufacturing Company]] | ||
** 935: [[Jefferson Construction Company]] (1905) | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 11:54, 18 June 2015
The Frank Nelson Building is a 10-story office building located on the northeast corner of 20th Street and 2nd Avenue North in downtown Birmingham. Constructed in 1903 as the First National Bank Building, it was one of the city's first "skyscrapers". It served as the headquarters for the First National Bank of Birmingham. The building was designed by William Weston with Charles Wheelock & Sons and cost about $700,000 to build.
First National Bank of Biirmingham merged with American-Traders National Bank, headquartered in the taller American Trust and Savings Bank Building a block south. The combined bank remodeled the lower floors of that building and relocated in 1940. Before leaving, the bank honored former Traders Bank executive and real-estate developer Frank Nelson, Jr by renaming its building in his honor in 1939.
The Frank Nelson Building features retail shops along both 20th Street and 2nd Avenue. Those shops currently house a UPS Store, Trattoria Centrale, and Pita Loco. The corner space, previously home of A. & A. Ash Jewelers, now houses the offices of software developers Whiteboard It.
The offices served as the home of the Birmingham School of Law from 1996 to 2012. The Woodruff Manufacturing Company also has offices in the building.
Tenants
- Ground floor
- 201-03 A. & A. Ash Jewelers (1940-2007)
- Upper floors
- Birmingham School of Law (1996-2012)
- Woodruff Manufacturing Company
- 935: Jefferson Construction Company (1905)
External links
- Frank Nelson Building on Emporis
- "British Shipping Industry" (August 6, 1903) Taranaki (New Zealand) Herald. Vol. 50, No. 12,325
- Satterfield, Carolyn Green (1976) "Historic Sites of Jefferson County, Alabama" Jefferson County Historical Commission