A building that never stopped working.
Long before Atlanta’s Beltilne buzzed with foot traffic and craft cocktails, the building at Inman Alley was doing what great buildings do: getting things done.

It started as a cotton warehouse in the 1890s—part of the city’s industrial backbone. Railcars clattered by. Laborers hauled and sorted bales in the heat.
Then, in 1941, the Clorox Company made it their fourth production facility in the U.S., manufacturing bleach in the heart of Inman Park. The work changed, but the purpose didn’t. This was a space built for output. For systems. For progress.
And now, that same spirit continues. Just with different tools.

Today, Inman Alley houses some of Atlanta’s most compelling office spaces. High ceilings, concrete floors, and storefront windows set the tone. But what really stands out is how naturally the old structure holds new ambition. Creative firms, tech teams, designers, and strategists now walk the same halls where machines once hummed. The work is different. The drive is the same.
Suite 130 - A Place That Makes Sense for Makers

What makes a good office today isn’t that different from what made a good factory a century ago. You need space that works. Light you can think in. A location that connects you to people and places that matter.
Suite 130 at Inman Alley checks all those boxes—plus a few you didn’t expect. Steps from Krog Street Market, with its own private entrance and a layout that balances openness with privacy, you're in the heart of the city’s creative corridor, but still have room to think.
Honoring the Past Without Getting Stuck In It
We don’t spotlight a building’s history to be sentimental. We do it because context matters.
At Pollock, our job is to help make those matches—to connect the character of a place with the momentum of the people moving into it. Because spaces that have stood the test of time tend to attract people who are doing the same.
Learn more about Inman Alley and Suite 130 here
