Highland Towers: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Highland Towers rendering.jpg|right|thumb|375px|1951 rendering of the Highland Towers building]]
[[Image:Highland Towers rendering.jpg|right|thumb|450px|1951 rendering of the Highland Towers building]]
[[Image:Highland Towers kitchenette.jpg|right|thumb|375px|Interior showing the kitchenette of a Highland Towers apartment, c. 1969]]
[[Image:Highland Towers kitchenette.jpg|right|thumb|450px|Interior showing the kitchenette of a Highland Towers apartment, c. 1969]]
'''Highland Towers''' is a 12-story apartment building located at 2251 [[Highland Avenue]]. The unadorned brick building was developed in [[1951]] by the [[J. H. Perkins Company]] of [[Ensley]] and designed by [[Henry Sprott Long]] of the firm of [[Long & Gatling]]. Its furnished efficiency and one-bedroom apartments originally rented for $68 and $83, respectively.
'''Highland Towers''' is a 12-story apartment building located at 2251 [[Highland Avenue]]. The unadorned brick building was developed in [[1951]] by the [[J. H. Perkins Company]] of [[Ensley]] and designed by [[Henry Sprott Long]] of the firm of [[Long & Gatling]]. Its furnished efficiency and one-bedroom apartments originally rented for $68 and $83, respectively.



Revision as of 11:22, 18 March 2019

1951 rendering of the Highland Towers building
Interior showing the kitchenette of a Highland Towers apartment, c. 1969

Highland Towers is a 12-story apartment building located at 2251 Highland Avenue. The unadorned brick building was developed in 1951 by the J. H. Perkins Company of Ensley and designed by Henry Sprott Long of the firm of Long & Gatling. Its furnished efficiency and one-bedroom apartments originally rented for $68 and $83, respectively.

The Highland Towers Sundry Shop, which advertised itself as the "World's Smallest Super Market" and "Birmingham's Most Unusual Store" was located on the ground floor.

The tower flanks the Highland Avenue Overpass, completed in 1967, opposite the similarly-scaled Highland Plaza.

In September 2011 a large, white block-letter "You Are Beautiful" tag was painted on the building's south-facing parapet. The building owners spent $4000 to remove the graffiti.

Retail tenants

References

  • "Neighborhood coffee house exits historic Highland Park" (March 17, 2006) Birmingham Business Journal
  • Gray, Jeremy (September 13, 2011) "Beautiful message creates not so beautiful clean up at Birmingham building." The Birmingham News

External links