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Showing posts with label erratic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label erratic. Show all posts

Mayson Chapel, Erratic in an Industrial Park

An Architecture Tourist erratic is a building that differs from those native to the area in which it rests.

Mayson Chapel Baptist Church is on Mayson Avenue near Plasters Avenue in the Armour-Ottley Industrial District.


It sits atop the tallest hill. If it had a steeple it would be a landmark. Instead, it's unremarkable, nearly invisible, until you look. I've been fascinated by the Mayson Chapel for years. It's so out of place but still active.

It alone remains from a prior era, alone among acres and acres of warehouses, parking lots, and railroad tracks.
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It could use some scraping but it's clean and well kept. Inside, it's ready for the next service.
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How many baptisms, weddings and funerals took place here in the last 87 years?

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It's pretty old, organized in 1909. The first cornerstone is from 1924.
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The second is from 1949, a few years before the industrial park. The community in this area must have been thriving and confident.
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In fact it was part of Benjamin Plaster Plantation. Slaves farmed cotton here and in Peachtree Hills. The Plaster home was across the creek just north of ADAC, probably visible from here in it's day.

Here we are looking north towards the Buckhead skyline, across the bottom lands of Peachtree Creek.
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This certainly remained farmland even as the city grew around it. There must have been a thriving community at one time. For you Atlantans: imagine farmlands where Sweetwater, Mason Murer, and Classic Design Services now stand.

The church is the only thing that remains from that time.

This is from the top floor of the parking lot at City Center, looking south from near Piedmont at Lindbergh, the ADAC is just visible on the right.
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From nearly a mile away, zoomed to the max, it's obviously a church, standing proud but reserved.
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How did I find this to begin with when you have to go this way to get there?
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If you live in town and want to take you children to "watch the trains," this is where you go.

Why "Plasters Avenue?" It joins the few blocks of Plaster's Bridge Road that still exist. Plaster's Bridge crossed Peachtree Creek just south of the current bridge on Piedmont Road.

Neoclassical Erratics in Decatur and Druid Hills

"A glacial erratic is a piece of rock that differs from the size and type of rock native to the area in which it rests." Henceforth, an Architecture Tourist erratic is a building that differs from those native to the area in which it rests.

Finding great houses in Buckhead, Druid Hills, Inman Park, Ansley Park is like shooting fish a barrel. It's a great pleasure but not really a sport.

If size doesn't matter, there are great houses all over Atlanta. Finding them IS a sport, a sport I dearly love, finding erratics most of all.

Here is a beaut: a POMO in Druid Hills with a neoclassical portico. Is it really a POMO? I haven't had my POMO lesson yet. (Hint hint Michelle.)


A modern in Druid Hills? I can only think of 4, one is effectively invisible except from the golf course.

This erratic is a modern married to a tiny Greek tomb, perhaps from Oakland Cemetery. It's a shape I can't resist. There's a bridge to boot. It's not the sort of thing you see in Druid Hills.
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To my eye it's always a treat, always in flux. It's good sport looking for it. Email me for a hint.
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Later, turning for home from Decatur I chose to do Oakhurst because I can't resist the Neel Reid designed Solarium, then Kirkwood because Howard Avenue never disappoints , then Edgewood because it's streets aren't thoroughfares and I don't know them well, then ... well I'm getting carried away now.

I turned down Wisteria for the first time. Among the very modest well kept ranchers, I found this neoclassical erratic. The shock faded quickly, the sensation was like finding a mansion in a small southern town. They all have a few mansions.
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There are several of these around East Lake and Kirkwood. I'd guess the original estate was subdivided in the 50's. By then the gentry was long gone to Buckhead.

The Decatur - Kirkwood axis is amazingly flat for Atlanta. It makes for an uncharacteristically welcoming front porch, thus the "Keep Out" sign.
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The semi-circular side porch is charming.
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If the long dripping window unit is any indication, the house is long past it's salad days. But the roof looks good, the paint is pretty fresh.
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There's a big 1 story porch on the back.
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