Elliott Street Deli & Pub is the neighborhood pub with a live music venue The 51 downstairs. Located in the historic CastleberryHill neighborhood of Atlanta Georgia, Elliott Street offers an intimate indoor setting in a restored turn of the century building as well as outdoor patio seating Elliott Street Deli & Pub's kitchen is open from 11am until midnight Tuesday through Saturday. The menu consists of hot and cold sandwiches made with Boar's Head meats served on fresh baked bread delivered daily. We also offer free wireless internet access to all our customers.
Opened in 2008, this Taco Mac location has been serving the downtown Atlanta community for over 8 years. Taco Mac offers the most “Craft on Draft"" with over 100 taps of craft and local brews, casual American fare, like fresh never frozen buffalo wings, and 35+ HD TVs for watching all your favorite sports. Started in 1979 by two friends who found their way from Buffalo, NY to the warmer and sunnier Atlanta, Taco Mac has grown from those humble beginnings to over 30 locations across the Southeast.
The Richard B. Russell Federal Building is a 26-storey International style building in Atlanta, Georgia, housing U.S. government agency offices and federal courts.
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Building (shorter form King Federal Building) is a building in Atlanta, Georgia. It was completed in 1933 in Modernist style for the United States Postal Service, and is now used as office accommodation by the United States Federal Government. It is included in the National Register of Historic Places.The building was constructed by the Work Projects Administration, a New Deal agency, reflecting the expansion of Federal activity at that time. It was located adjacent to Terminal Station in Spring Street, and mail was transferred via tunnels from the railroad network, which then handled most long-distance mail. Later the building became a Federal office building, receiving its present name in 1988. The General Services Administration (GSA) undertook renovation in 2012, as far as possible in line with current "green building" criteria.
Omni Coliseum was an indoor arena located in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Completed in 1972, the arena seated 16,378 for basketball and 15,278 for hockey. It was part of the Omni Complex, now known as the CNN Center.It was mainly used as the home arena for the Atlanta Hawks and the Atlanta Flames . It also hosted the 1977 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament and the 1996 Summer Olympics indoor volleyball.HistoryThe arena was considered an architectural marvel when first constructed, combining innovative design for the roof, seating, and the structure itself. The logo is based on the unique seating arrangement. The exterior was composed of Cor-Ten weathering steel, which was supposed to seal itself by continuing to rust, making a solid steel structure that would last for decades. The Omni was noted for its distinctive space frame roof, often joked about as looking like an egg crate or a rusty waffle iron. Designed by the firm of tvsdesign with structural engineering work by the firm of Prybylowski and Gravino, the roof was technically described as an ortho-quad truss system.