About The Hartz Bulding

The Hartz Building at 483 Moreland Avenue has been here since 1915.

 

It started as the Holbrook Apartments — a small residential building that went up just as streetcar lines were turning this corner into a real neighborhood. Shops opened. Theaters followed. People gathered. The Holbrook gave them a place to live while they did.

 

It was designed by Leila Ross Wilburn, Georgia's most prolific residential architect and one of the first women to practice in the state. Wilburn had a simple belief: good design belongs to everyone. She sold affordable plans, kept her prices honest, and cared more about how a space gets used than how it looks from the street. That thinking is in this building's bones.

 

Little Five Points has always been a crossroads — where neighborhoods meet, people pass through, and something new starts. In 1994, the firm Pimsler-Haas restored the building, added a third story, and shifted it from residential to commercial. Different use. Same purpose.

 

Today the Hartz Building sits at the center of one of the most creatively independent neighborhoods in the South.

 

It's not the kind of landmark that asks you to look up. It's the kind that's just always been here — holding the corner while Little Five Points became Little Five Points.