Niazuma Avenue
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Niazuma Avenue is the name of a segment of road connecting 26th Street South at Highland Avenue to Pawnee Avenue in Birmingham's Highland Park neighborhood.
In the early 20th century, Niazuma Avenue continued to 29th Street South (then called Iroquois Street), before becoming Pawnee Avenue. Before the late 1910s, addresses that now begin in the 2600s were listed in the 1200s, and odd numbers were on the north, rather than the south side of the avenue.
Notable addresses
- road continues from 26th Street South
- Highland Avenue intersects
- north side:
- 2600–2610: Christopher Architecture & Interiors
- 2612–2630: The Murals on Niazuma apartments, formerly the Chesterfield Apartments
- 2622 (1223): former location of S. L. Earle residence (1909–1925)
- 2630 (1231): former location of H. R. Sanson residence (1909–1917), E. E. Linthicum (1925)
- south side:
- 2601–2609: Highland View office building
- 2611–2631: Capri on Caldwell (built 2007), former location of Capri Apartments (built 1959, demolished 2005)
- 2631 (1230): former location of J. E. Morriss residence (1909), F. C. Finch (1917), R. J. McGavock (1925)
- north side:
- 27th Place South intersects (formerly Linden Street)
- north side
- 2700 (1301): former location of J. W. Shook residence (1917), E. S. Jemison (1925), Theodore Swann (1930s)
- 2704 (1305): former location of Mrs E. L. Roden residence (1917), F. H. Crockard (1925)
- 2724: Villa Apartments
- 2728 (2714): Sterling Foster residence (built 1913), home of Hugo Black (1930s–1940s), Red Mountain School (1972–1978), Aletheia House (1978–1983), Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs (1983–)
- 2730 (1330): former location of A. J. Krebs residence (1909)
- south side:
- 2719 (1320): former location of W. T. Fox residence (1917)
- 2723 (1324): former location of H. J. Porter residence (1917), C. M. Rudolph (1925)
- 2747: former location of W. H. Kettig residence (1917)
- north side
- Niazuma Circle intersects (south only)
- road continues as Pawnee Avenue