The '''Heaviest Corner on Earth''' is a promotional name given to the corner of 20th Street and 1st Avenue North in Birmingham,_Alabama, USA, in the early 20th century. The name reflected the nearly-simultaneous appearance of four of the tallest buildings in the South, the 10-story Woodward Building (1902), 16-story Brown Marx Building (1906), 16-story Empire Building (1909), and the 21-story American Trust and Savings Bank Building (1912). The announcement of the latter building was made in the ''Jemison Magazine'' in a January 1911 article entitled "Birmingham to Have the Heaviest Corner in the South". Over the years, that claim was inflated to the improbable "Heaviest Corner on Earth", which remains a popular name for the grouping. A marker, erected on May 23, 1985 by the Birmingham Historical Society, with cooperation from Operation New Birmingham, stands on the sidewalk outside the Empire Building describing the group. The "Heaviest Corner on Earth" was added to the National_Register_of_Historic_Places on August 11, 1985. ==References== * Heaviest Corner on Earth at BhamWiki ==External links== * Photographs of the Heaviest Corner on Earth at Flickr. Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Birmingham,_Alabama Category:Registered_Historic_Places_in_Alabama Category:Skyscrapers_in_the_United_States {{alabama-stub}}