Cheesy Flash Slideshow Time!

Posted by kc on Jun 4th, 2007

Last night I created a cheesy flash slide-show from my various pictures of the Medical Arts Building.

It’s 8MB, so it might take a few minutes to load if you have a slow connection.

Here it is: http://phreakmonkey.com/ue/medarts.html

Medical Arts part deux

Posted by kc on Jun 1st, 2007

I recently decided to wander by the Medical Arts building for some more snapshots. I parked in my usual spot, wandered through my previous POE, took some pictures, and then noticed that someone had driven an automobile through the entire front plate glass window!!

Damn. That’s why the place smells so musty. Right about then someone on one of the upper floors started using the open utility shaft (see my previous pics) as a urinal. Hrmm. This place is probably fairly well occupied, I decide, what with the front of it having a 10 foot hole knocked in it.

So, I confined my photography to the main levels and the sub-basement, where I found the boiler room. I wanted to go up and photograph the burned-out 6th floor, but decided that ascending into the highrise was a bad idea given its current state. I decided the safety hazard posed by the massive hole in the building warranted a call to notify the owner of the building’s condition upon my return.

P.S. – The boiler room pics were illuminated by flashlight. It’s freakin’ dark down there! :)

Medical Arts Building

Posted by kc on May 9th, 2007

I have always noticed the empty, decaying early 20th century building overlooking the connector on Peachtree Street and wondered what it was. From its appearance, I had assumed it was an old hotel or apartment building. Imagine my surprise when I discovered that it was actually a hospital!

The Medical Arts building was designed in 1927, and was reportedly one of the most modern hospitals in the Southern United States. I have also heard rumor that it was the first racially integrated hospital in the South, and as such the first southern hospital where a black and white child were born in the same maternity ward on the same day.

At the time of this writing the current owner is simply renovating the parking structure to sell parking on Peachtree St. It is unknown whether any plans are in the works for the structure itself.

There is very little remaining of the interior of the building, though many floors still had the “medical institution green” paint on the walls. The marble foyer is clearly original, and the brass elevator doors are decorated with metal plates depicting the classic “caduceus” medical symbol.

The 6th floor was at some point decimated by a fire, probably after the building became vacant.