More than four years have passed since plans for Atlanta’s tallest building in three decades were initially unveiled. Now, with its opening on the near horizon, architects are getting more specific than ever about what the Alina skyscraper will offer.
Officials with TVS—an architecture firm founded in Atlanta in 1968, with a portfolio that includes the Omni Coliseum, Georgia Dome, Midtown’s Promenade tower, Georgia Aquarium, and Sandy Springs’ King and Queen buildings, among other landmarks—say the Alina building (formerly 1072 West Peachtree) is aiming to create connected and welcoming spaces for Midtown visitors, workers, and residents. [CLARIFICATION: 5:40 p.m., March 18: Project reps send word that "the building itself is still named 1072 West Peachtree, while Alina refers specifically to the residential portion of the property."]
The 60-story tower will count room for hundreds of new Midtowners in 357 apartments, ranging from studios up to three-bedroom options in a unique pinwheel floorplan layout. According to architects, most floors will be limited to just eight units total.
That design tactic is meant to ensure each luxury rental will have at least two “cardinal views,” or vantage points to the north, south, east, and west, according to TVS.
Pool and deck area at Alina described by designers as being worthy of resorts. Courtesy of TVS and Rockefeller Group
Fresh look at a sample apartment interior at the Alina building, looking west toward Georgia Tech. Courtesy of TVS and Rockefeller Group
This being Atlanta, the 749-feet-tall building’s mixed-use status (expect 6,300 square feet of street-level retail and 224,000 square feet of Class-A office space) will contribute to big parking needs as well. Plans call for enough space on site for 750 vehicles, as designers specified in a recent update.
The goal with Alina’s form and materials was to balance “vertical expression with contextual sensitivity,” per TVS reps. That means the building’s stone-clad podium, where retail and offices will be placed, is meant to anchor it among the hard surfaces of surrounding streets. Above that, the tower’s slender glass body is lighter as it climbs.
Alina is striving to be one of Midtown’s most amenitized residential and office mashups. As such, according to TVS, the “Sky Garden” section will qualify as Midtown’s largest amenity deck. It was designed to offer panoramic views of Atlanta and a leafy, landscaped environment where building inhabitants can find both community and wellness, per TVS.
“We have created a new destination that contributes meaningfully to Atlanta’s skyline while enhancing the experience of living and working in Midtown,” said Janet Simpson, TVS president and CEO, in a statement.
According to the tower’s developer, New York City-based Rockefeller Group, leasing at Alina will begin sometime this spring, and some units will qualify as lofts and penthouses. Bozzuto, an experience-focused residential real estate firm, has been hired to handle leasing.
Rent prices haven’t been specified.
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. Penthouses, meanwhile, will see luxury perks such as Viking appliances, dry bars for entertaining, backlit vanity mirrors, and large walk-in closets, as Rockefeller officials announced last month.
As shown in a new rendering, looking north, plans for the Alina tower’s resort-style residential pool above offices. Courtesy of TVS and Rockefeller Group
Moments after the final beam was installed, a southward look at the 1072 West Peachtree high-rise Nov. 7 from West Peachtree Street. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Beyond architecture design, TVS handled interior design and general planning for the project.
The development team also includes a long list of partner companies: Brock Hudgins Architects (residential architecture); SITE Solutions (landscape); Walter P. Moore (structural engineering); Turner Construction Company (general contractor); Eberly & Associates (civil engineer); Salas O’Brien (lighting plus mechanical, electrical, and plumbing engineering); WorkingBuildings (sustainability consultant); and Persohn/Hahn Associates Inc. (vertical transportation).
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.
View south toward downtown from 1072 West Peachtree's highest floors today. Courtesy of Rockefeller Group
Aerial photo in November 2025 of Midtown's skyline, which has transformed with residential and office development over the past decade, with Buckhead in the distance at left. Urbanize Atlanta
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.
Find a thorough rundown of Alina preview renderings and our more recent photos in the gallery above.
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