Current:Home > NewsThe fizz is gone: Atlanta’s former Coca-Cola museum demolished for parking lot -WealthMap Solutions
The fizz is gone: Atlanta’s former Coca-Cola museum demolished for parking lot
View
Date:2025-04-14 21:34:43
ATLANTA (AP) — Once a shrine to the world’s most popular soft drink, the building that housed the original World of Coca-Cola is going flat at the hands of Georgia’s state government.
Crews continued Friday to demolish the onetime temple of fizz in downtown Atlanta near the state capitol, with plans to convert the site to a parking lot.
Visitors since 2007 have taken their pause that refreshes across downtown at a newer, larger Coca-Cola Co. museum in Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park. The building is testament to the marketing mojo of the Atlanta-based beverage titan, getting visitors to pay to view the company’s take on its history and sample its drinks.
The park has become the heart of the city’s tourism industry, ringed by hotels and attractions including the Georgia Aquarium, the College Football Hall of Fame, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, State Farm Arena and the Georgia World Congress Center convention hall.
State government bought the original three-story museum, which opened in 1990, from Coca-Cola in 2005 for $1 million, said Gerald Pilgrim, deputy executive director of the Georgia Building Authority. The agency maintains and manages state properties.
Once Atlanta’s most visited indoor attraction, the building has been vacant since Coca-Cola moved out in 2007, Pilgrim said. He said state officials decided to demolish it because some of the existing surface parking for the Georgia Capitol complex is going to be taken up by a construction staging area to build a new legislative office building. The demolition would create new parking adjoining a former railroad freight depot that is a state-owned event space.
“With limited space around Capitol Hill, there was a need to replace the public parking that was being lost due to the neighboring construction project,” Pilgrim wrote in an email Friday.
Lawmakers agreed this year, with little dissent, to spend $392 million to build a new eight-story legislative office building for themselves and to renovate the 1889 Capitol building. That project is supposed to begin soon and be complete by the end of 2026.
Pilgrim said the demolition will cost just under $1.3 million and is projected to be complete by Aug. 1.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Nikki Haley vows to stay in race, ramping up attacks on Trump
- February's full moon is coming Saturday. It might look smaller than usual.
- Southern California shopping center closed following reports of explosion
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Man suspected in killing of woman in NYC hotel room arrested in Arizona after two stabbings there
- What to know as Julian Assange faces a ruling on his U.S. extradition case over WikiLeaks secrets
- Child hospitalized after 4 fall through ice on northern Vermont lake
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- An unusual criminal case over handwritten lyrics to ‘Hotel California’ goes to trial Wednesday
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- King Charles III Shares Tearful Reaction to Supporters Amid Cancer Battle
- Amy Grant says 5-hour surgery to remove throat cyst forced her to relearn singing
- 2 suspects in Kansas City parade shooting charged with murder, prosecutors announce
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Vanderpump Rules' Tom Schwartz Spills the Tea on Tom Sandoval's New Girlfriend
- How Alabama's ruling that frozen embryos are 'children' could impact IVF
- Police say armed Texas student wounded by officers in school had meant to hurt people
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Shoppers Say This TikTok-Loved $1 Lipstick Feels Like a Spa Day for Their Lips
Hiker describes 11-hour ordeal after falling on Mount Washington, admits he was ‘underprepared’
A search is underway for a missing 3-year-old Wisconsin boy
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
'Dune 2' review: Timothee Chalamet sci-fi epic gets it right the second time around
A search is underway for a missing 3-year-old Wisconsin boy
Police say armed Texas student wounded by officers in school had meant to hurt people