As its official opening nears, the tallest building erected in Atlanta since the early 1990s will no longer be named for its address. 

New York City-based Rockefeller Group’s 60-story, skyline-redefining Midtown tower formerly known as 1072 West Peachtree has officially been christened “Alina”—that’s pronounced “a-lee-na”—as the city’s tallest residential tower to date. 

Rockefeller leadership today unveiled fresh renderings, details, and a website for the 357-apartment Alina project, which they maintain will be “unsurpassed” in several ways. 

Project officials also announced that experience-focused residential real estate firm Bozzuto will head leasing efforts at the Alina tower, which are expected to kick off in the second quarter of 2026. (Bozzuto was brought onboard at another swanky high-rise addition to Midtown last year, the two-tower The Reserve at Juniper/The Juniper project near Piedmont Park.) 

Alina’s apartments—ranging from studios to three-bedroom units, with loft and penthouse units among them that feature private parking—will top out at 749 feet off the ground, marking Atlanta’s tallest building in more than three decades.  

A project rep tells Urbanize Atlanta information on the range of rents at Alina isn’t yet available but likely will be in coming weeks.

As shown in a new rendering, plans for the Alina tower’s resort-style residential pool above offices. Courtesy of Rockefeller Group

Alina’s standard apartments will count ceilings up to 10 feet high and “condominium-quality finishes” that include wine fridges, custom cabinetry, keyless entry, and Kohler fixtures in bathrooms, among other facets, per Rockefeller officials. 

The baller penthouses, meanwhile, will boast luxury perks such as Viking appliances, dry bars for entertaining, backlit vanity mirrors, and large walk-in closets, according to project reps.  

Beyond the residences, Alina perks call for more than 1 acre of indoor and outdoor amenity spaces with an athletic club befitting resorts (think: saunas, frost lockers, recovery spaces, private spa treatment rooms, and full-service locker rooms) along with an outdoor pickleball court with Midtown views, according to project officials.  

Elsewhere, expect a clubroom with a golf simulator, billiards, shuffleboard, an entertaining kitchen, and two fireplace lounges, while outside a “one-of-a-kind dog run will be included on the 20th floor with panoramic city views,” per an announcement today. 

The property will also feature what’s been dubbed “The Pavilion at 1072”—Midtown’s largest outdoor deck, with a flex lawn for social gatherings and private events—and what’s described (questionably?) as Midtown’s “only high-rise, resort-style pool.” (The nearby 30-story, pool-topped Sora apartment building also comes to mind, as one example.) 

Fresh look at a sample apartment interior at the Alina building, looking west toward Georgia Tech. Courtesy of Rockefeller Group

John Petricola, Rockefeller’s senior managing director of the southeast region, said Alina’s apartments and amenities “reflect the pinnacle of our vision for 1072 West Peachtree” as a “vertically connected community where elevated design, modern convenience, and immersive experiences come together to create a truly distinctive lifestyle in Atlanta” in today’s announcement. 

Perks of the location, per Rockefeller, include 10-minute walkability to Piedmont Park, Tech Square, and Colony Square, and “unrivaled access” to more than 100 restaurants, bars, and cafes. Two MARTA stations (with direct airport access) are within a five-minute walk, per Rockefeller’s count.  

Courtesy of Rockefeller Group

Once finished, Alina will mark Atlanta’s fifth tallest high-rise, supplanting Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel for the No. 5 spot. No taller skyrise has been built in the city since 1992. 

Rockefeller bought the former 1.14-acre U.S. Postal Service facility site for $25 million in 2020 and broke ground on the skyscraper in July 2023. The project officially topped out in November. 

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