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Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District

Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District
Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District is located in Atlanta
Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District
Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District is located in Georgia (U.S. state)
Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District
Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District is located in the US
Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District
Location 225 North Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia  United States
Coordinates 33°46′21″N 84°23′40″W / 33.77250°N 84.39444°W / 33.77250; -84.39444Coordinates: 33°46′21″N 84°23′40″W / 33.77250°N 84.39444°W / 33.77250; -84.39444
Area 9 acres (0.036 km2), 12 buildings
Built 1888
Architect Multiple
Architectural style Beaux Arts, Colonial Revival, Romanesque
NRHP reference # 78000983
Added to NRHP October 25, 1978

The Historic District of the Georgia Institute of Technology, also known as the Old Campus of Georgia Tech or the Hill District, is significant in the areas of architecture, education, engineering and science, as well as landscape architecture. The area is a Registered Historic Place and part of the central campus of Georgia Tech. Located in Midtown Atlanta, Georgia, United States, it is roughly bounded by North Avenue on the South, Bobby Dodd Stadium, a 55,000 seat football stadium on the East, Bobby Dodd Way on the North and Cherry Street on the West.

The Georgia Institute of Technology Historic District is situated on and around the crest of "The Hill," the highest elevation of the school's original nine-acre campus. Comprising 12 buildings, the Old Campus is a landscaped cluster of mixed-period classroom, dormitory and administrative brick buildings. Buildings of the Old Campus include the Carnegie Building, which was the campus library until 1953; the Georgia Tech President's Office is now located there. Lyman Hall Laboratory, named after Lyman Hall, one of Georgia Tech's earlier presidents, was the school's first Chemistry Building. The YMCA Building, funded by John D. Rockefeller in 1910, now houses the Georgia Tech Alumni Association Offices. The random placement of these buildings around the centrally positioned Administration Building ("Tech Tower") has created unique urban spaces. Hundred year-old trees shade the red brick buildings and enhance the sense of special enclosure.


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