75 Spring St SW
Atlanta, GA 30303
(770) 448-8200
The Math/Science program is designed to provide 74 outstanding and success driven students with a six-week intensive residential summer curriculum. The program assists students in developing critical thinking, scientific & analytical skills, and effective expression. It also provides students the opportunity to step outside of their comfort zone and to interact with their peers from different states of the region, which in turn, fosters an environment of diversity and life long friendship
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.
The Georgia Tech Student Ambassadors is a group of students dedicated to representing Georgia Tech's student body as official hosts for the Institute. Student Ambassadors serve the Institute by welcoming members of the Georgia Tech community including alumni, prospective students, and special guests of Tech. Members are selected each spring through a rigorous application process based on their leadership qualities, communication skills, knowledge of Tech, and unlimited enthusiasm for Georgia Tech.
Please call ahead to any of the businesses to find out their hours of operation.
Hotel Row is a both National Register and locally listed historic district consisting of one block of early 20th-century commercial buildings, three to four stories high, located on Mitchell Street west of Forsyth Street in the South Downtown district of Atlanta. The buildings were originally hotels with ground level retail shops built to serve the needs of passengers from Terminal Station, opened in 1905. The buildings are the most intact row of early 20th-century commercial structures in Atlanta's original business district. The decline of Hotel Row began in the 1920s due to the increased availability of automobile transportation and the construction of the Spring Street viaduct, which made getting to hotels in the northern part of the city easier. In the 1950s and 1960s, the increase in air travel led ultimately to the demolition of Terminal Station in 1971.The district is architecturally significant because the structures that make up the block retain most of their original historic architectural character. Several structures were developed by Samuel Inman and Walker Inman, two of Atlanta's most prominent businessmen, and the majority of the structures were designed by the leading architects of the period. They typify the early 20th-century commercial structures once common in Atlanta but now rare because of extensive redevelopment. With Atlanta's massive gentrification, plans were underway to convert some of the buildings into lofts, however these plans ultimately stalled as a result of the Late-2000s recession.