Now there is a better way to live, work and play in Atlanta – Century Skyline apartment homes, distinctively styled with all the features and amenities we know you'll enjoy. Come home to spaces that invite and inspire. Thoughtfully designed, these generous spaces feature soaring ceiling heights and over-sized windows, granite countertops, hardwood floors and distinctive design features tailored to urban living. From the extraordinary rooftop pool and clubroom to its unbelievable location with walking distance to Midtown and Downtown, Century Skyline is the ultimate address to access Atlanta’s most popular attractions. Easily walk to your favorite shops and restaurants, or catch an exhibit at the Atlanta Civic Center. You’ll even find MARTA only steps away. Best of all is Century Skyline's amazing location and top-notch management team, ensuring an experience that is second to none. Finally, an apartment home as unique as you! Welcome to Century Skyline… Welcome Home!
The Georgia Power Company Corporate Headquarters is a 24-story, 91m skyscraper in downtown Atlanta, Georgia serving Georgia Power, a subsidiary of Southern Company. The prior Georgia Power headquarters building was in downtown Atlanta at the corner of Alabama and Forsyth streets in the former Atlanta Constitution Building.Passive solar designCompleted in 1981 the building utilizes 4,500 tons of structural steel, and its floors have a passive solar design, with each floor on the south-facing side extending 15in beyond the one below. In summer, when the sun is high in the sky, each extension partially shades the windows below; in winter, when the sun is lower in the southern sky, it shines directly into the windows to assist with space heating. This design allows for the building to use nearly 60% less energy than most other buildings of the sort. Because of this incremental increase in floor size from the ground to the roof on the southern facade, the building is sometimes referred to as the "Leaning Tower of Power".Solar thermal projectWhen the building opened, it featured an experimental solar thermal project on the south plaza, which was dismantled after a few years due to maintenance costs and scarcity and expense of replacement parts. The solar project on the south plaza of the Georgia Power Company headquarters building in the early 1980s consisted of 1,482 parabolic trough (line focus) concentrating collectors with a total surface area of. Each glass-lined collector had a length of and an aperture of. Pressurized water from a 6000gal storage tank under the plaza was cycled through the tubes in the collectors and heated to about for use in the building's heating and absorption air conditioning systems.