7th Avenue North
7th Avenue North is a downtown street in Birmingham's northside.
The westernmost sections between Eufaula Avenue and 15th Street West and between 12th and 11th Street West near Birmingham-Southern College are known as 7th Avenue West. 7th Avenue North proper begins at 6th Street, but dies into the I-65 right of way after just two blocks.
The main stretch of 7th Avenue downtown picks up at 11th Street, just east of I-65, and runs straight into Birmingham City Hall at 19th Street. It picks up again on the other side of Linn Park, past Phillips High School and under the Elton B. Stephens Expressway, before ending at a railroad serving Sloss Furnaces just past 31st Street.
A one-block long section of 7th Avenue connects 41st Street to 42nd Place North at Whatley Elementary School. Another short section crosses from 43rd Street to Messer Airport Highway at 46th Street in Kingston. The easternmost segment runs through a residential area from southwest of 79th Street North to 83rd Street North, about four blocks northwest of East Lake. A single-engine plane crashed in that area on January 5, 2011, killing the pilot.
Electric lights were installed on 7th Avenue North from 19th to 21st Street in 1945 under the city's contract with the Birmingham Electric Company.
Notable locations
Smithfield
- 9th Street North intersection
Fountain Heights
- 13th Street North intersection
- 1300: Airgas offices, former location of the Birmingham Distilling Company
- 1321: Hope House
- 14th Street North intersection
- North side (Block 15)
- 1400: City Center Place apartments
- 1420: Ballard House (built 1950), former location of Ma Perkins' boarding house (1950s), Herschell Hamilton Sr physician (1960s), Formation Methods
- 1430: St John African Methodist Episcopal Church
- South side (Block 39)
- 1413: Harris Early Learning Center (built 1995)
- 1431: former location of First Congregational Christian Church (1911-1949)
- North side (Block 15)
- Intersection with 15th Street North
- North side (Block 16)
- 1500: former location of Charles Graffeo's store (1920s)
- 1512: Automotive Friction Material Co.
- South side (Block 38)
- 1501: Poole Funeral Chapel
- 1525: former location of Ulysses Mason residence
- North side (Block 16)
- Intersection with 16th Street North
- North side (Block 17)
- former location of Knesseth Israel Congregation
- Birmingham General Employees Credit Union
- South side (Block 37)
- former location of Alabama Power fleet fuel service
- North side (Block 17)
- Intersection with 17th Street North
- North side (Block 18)
- Alabama Power employee parking
- 1730: former location of Young Men's Hebrew Association
- South side (Block 36)
- Alabama Power Company Headquarters Complex (built 1990)
- North side (Block 18)
- Intersection with 18th Street North
- North side (Block 19)
- 1804: offices of Douglas Corretti, Donald Newsom, Mary Douglas Hawkins and James Scaldo
- 1806: former location of Johns Funeral Home (1899-)
- 1808: Birmingham Fire Station No. 1 (built 1971)
- 1820: Legal Services Building (built 1950), Today to Tonight mural (1978-)
- South side (Block 35)
- Birmingham Greyhound Station (built 1950)
- North side (Block 19)
Central City
- Intersection with 19th Street North (7th Avenue resumes at 21st Street, but Park Avenue/Park Place addresses were once listed as 7th Avenue North)
- Short 20th Street (Nina's Way, formerly West 20th Street) intersects (north only)
- North side (Block 21)
- Linn Park, formerly Capitol Park, Woodrow Wilson Park
- South side (Block 34)
- Park Place Tower
- 1925: former location of Birmingham Fire Station No. 1
- 1927: former location of Dale's Cellar (-1968), Society's Child (1968-)
- 1929: former location of Chesterfield Hotel (1925)
- North side (Block 21)
- Intersection with 20th Street North (south only)
- former intersection with East 20th Street (north only, now part of Linn Park)
- North side (Block 22)
- Linn-Henley Research Library (built 1927 as Birmingham Public Library)
- South side (Block 33)
- Tutwiler Hotel (1986), formerly Ridgely Apartments (built 1914)
- North side (Block 22)
- Intersection with 21st Street North
- North side (Block 23)
- 2100: former site of Education Building (built 1924)
- 2126: Jefferson County Domestic Relations Court, former location of Edwin Stephenson's residence
- South side (Block 32
- Birmingham Central Library
- Birmingham Public Library parking
- North side (Block 23)
- Intersection with 22nd Street North
- North side (Block 24)
- Phillips High School parking
- South side (Block 31)
- Park Place (Hope VI project), former site of Metropolitan Gardens
- 2217: former location of Esther Home (1925)
- former location of A. L. Monroe's boarding house (1880s)
- North side (Block 24)
- Intersection with 23rd Street North
- North side (Block 25)
- 2316: Phillips Academy (2006-), former location of John T. Terry residence (built 1873), Central High School (1906-1918), Phillips High School (1923-2002)
- South side (Block 30)
- Park Place (Hope VI project), former site of Metropolitan Gardens and Birmingham Conservatory of Music
- North side (Block 25)
- Intersection with 24th Street North
- North side (Block 26)
- 2400: YMCA Youth Building
- 2420: Birmingham Health Care clinic, former location of Simpson Methodist Church ( -1941), Central Church of Christ (1941-1990),
- South side (Block 29)
- Marconi Park, formerly East End Park
- North side (Block 26)
- Intersection with 25th Street North
- North side (Block 27)
- Jones Valley Teaching Farm
- 2524: former location of Birmingham Arms & Cycle Co. (1895)
- South side (Block 28)
- Park Place (Hope VI project), former site of Metropolitan Gardens
- 2521: former site of Central City Boys Club, RolleRink
- North side (Block 27)
- Avenue continues under Elton B. Stephens Expressway (U.S. Highway 31)
- Intersection with 26th Street North
- 2801: Birmingham Winsupply
- 2828: Anchor Packaging Company
- 2900: Bayliss Machine & Welding
- 2930: Jim Harvey's Alignment Service, D & H Auto Sales
- 2931: S & B Industrial Minerals
- 3000: Cline Tours, former site of Richard McNally residence
- 3051: former location of C. Occhipinti merchandise (1927)
- 3100: Birmingham-Jefferson County Transit Authority, former site of Children's Hospital
- 3101: 1st Source Servall Appliance Parts
- 3125: VCM Sales
- 3200: TCI Tire Centers
Kingston
- Intersection with 40th Street North
- former location of Cunningham School (built 1910)
- Intersection with 44th Street North
- former location of Anderson Electric