Piedmont Hotel
The Piedmont Hotel was a hotel in Downtown Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Construction on the building, which was designed by architect Willis F. Denny, began in 1901, and the building was opened to the public in January 1903. Considered one of the finest hotels in the city at the time, numerous famous guests stayed at the hotel while visiting Atlanta, including three presidents of the United States. Unlike other Atlanta hotels, the Piedmont sought to emulate the style of hotels in the northeastern United States and was commonly referred to by locals as "our New York City hotel". In 1929, the building went through an extensive renovation overseen by the architectural firm of Pringle & Smith. In 1965, the owners of the hotel agreed to sell the property to the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, who planned to build a new office building on the site. The hotel was demolished that year and in 1968, the Equitable Building was completed.
History
Background and construction
During the latter half of the 19th century, the land in downtown Atlanta that the hotel would be built on was primarily residential. In the 1850s, William Ezzard, who would later serve multiple terms as mayor of Atlanta, had a two-story brick house built on that city block and lived there until selling the property in 1880. On August 3, 1901, the Piedmont Hotel Company spent $125,000 in purchasing the city block from the multiple owners who owned the individual land lots, which included politician M. Hoke Smith. At this time, the area was still residential, though there were two other hotels that had been built in the area: the Hotel Aragon in 1892 and the Majestic Hotel in 1898. Atlanta's main center for development had been located south of this area, at Five Points, although by the early 20th century, this area had grown congested and new developments began to spread northwards along Peachtree Street. Hotel construction followed this trend, as new hotels built in the early 1900s such as the Georgian Terrace Hotel and the Biltmore Hotel were located further from the city's Union Station than hotels that had been built in the 1800s.Construction on the Piedmont Hotel commenced in mid-1901. The building was designed by Willis F. Denny, an Atlanta-based architect who designed several other notable buildings in the city, such as St. Mark United Methodist Church and Rhodes Hall. Construction on the hotel lasted through 1902, and it opened to the public at noon on January 15, 1903. The opening was a big event for the city, as thousands of people gathered to see the hotel's interior and prompting the Atlanta chief of police to dispatch officers to keep order. That afternoon, The Atlanta Journal published a front page story on the opening, calling the hotel "the handsomest and most complete in the South". While other hotels in the city, such as the Kimball House, had a reputation as institutions that maintained Southern customs, such as in the Southern cuisine offered in their eateries, the Piedmont instead sought to emulate the style of the hotels in the northeastern United States. One way in which the Piedmont differed from other local hotels was that their staff of bellhops and chambermaids consisted entirely of white Americans, unlike in other hotels which often employed African Americans in those positions. According to historian Franklin Garrett, the hotel was often referred to by locals as "our New York City hotel". In 1906, Atlanta's first storefront theater, a nickelodeon called the Peachtree Theatorium, opened in the hotel's lobby. The following year, a guide book called the Piedmont the largest hotel in the city.