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By Gretchen Keiser
The restoration of the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception has
been recognized by the Atlanta Urban Design Commission as one of the
outstanding works of 1984 in Atlanta historic presentation.
The restoration is one of 10 projects selected for the
commissions annual Award of Excellence, which recognize major
contributions to the citys design and character through building and
preservation work. Among other projects chosen for the 1984 awards were the new
High Museum, whose design by architect Richard Meier has already won national
recognition; the restoration of Briarcliff Plaza shopping center at Ponce de
Leon and Briarcliff where the firm of Griffith & Associates, Inc. restored
the citys first shopping mall including Plaza Drugs and the Majestic
Diner; and the restoration of five old homes in the Martin Luther King, Jr.
Historic District and conversion into apartments available to families at low
rent.
The awards are chosen each year from nominations submitted by
civic and neighborhood groups, architects, historians and others. However, the
Shrine of the Immaculate Conception restoration was a unanimous choice from the
beginning, said Charles Munn, staff member of the commission. When the
nomination process began, Munn said, the commission already agreed that the
Shrine was probably the outstanding (historical) preservation project
done this year in Atlanta. The commissions office looks out
on the Shrine, where restoration work has been underway for over a year and a
half since fire gutted the church in August, 1982. Before the fire, the Shrine
was the oldest complete building in Atlanta and the restoration work and
reconstruction proceeded from the point of preserving the exterior walls and
portions which survived the fire. Architect Henry Howard Smith of Atlanta was
chosen for the project by the archdiocese. The Shrine is to be rededicated May
25.
The awards were to be presented by Mayor Andrew Young at the High
Museum on Thursday, May 3. |