Atlanta

Buckhead’s Millionaire Row High-Rise Quietly Puts Condos on Sale in Low $300Ks

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Published on February 11, 2026
Buckhead’s Millionaire Row High-Rise Quietly Puts Condos on Sale in Low $300KsSource: Google Street View

A familiar Buckhead rental tower is quietly getting a second act as a for-sale condo building, with price tags that undercut much of Peachtree Road’s glossy skyline. Developer Crescent Heights is converting the 17-story building at 2460 Peachtree Road into Panorama Buckhead Residences, rolling out renovated one- and two-bedroom homes with introductory prices in the low $300,000s. The shift adds roughly 236 condos to Buckhead’s for-sale inventory, with a broad mix of layouts and refreshed common spaces aimed at buyers who want the address without the eight-figure flex.

Pricing and floorplans

According to Urbanize Atlanta, the project is bringing 236 one- and two-bedroom condos to market, ranging from about 814 to 1,260 square feet. Early MLS listings include a fifth-floor one-bedroom at $314,000 and an 11th-floor two-bedroom asking roughly $385,000. Monthly HOA dues on those units are reported at around $660, per a Zillow listing.

Amenities and monthly costs

Marketing materials and the project’s sales site highlight a revamped entry and lobby, upgraded gym equipment, sauna and steam rooms, a dog park and grooming spa, an updated pool and pool deck, and glass-wrapped balconies on select floors, according to the development’s website. Those shared perks, along with concierge services and common-area upkeep, are rolled into the monthly carrying costs that buyers will need to factor in when comparing these condos to other options at similar price points.

Sale history and who’s behind it

Public records and brokerage data show the 17-story tower dates to the early 1980s and traded in November 2024 for roughly $55.2 million to an LLC tied to the Peachtree Road address, per Redfin. Crescent Heights is steering the conversion and has enlisted Ansley Developer Services and Christie’s International Real Estate to handle sales, according to Homes.com.

What this means for Buckhead

The project’s marketing leans into the address, branding the stretch as part of “Atlanta’s exclusive Millionaire’s Row.” At the same time, the relatively lower entry prices signal a bid to inject more attainable ownership options into Buckhead’s luxury corridor, contrasting with newer towers across the street that launched in the $800,000s, per Urbanize Atlanta. “This is like a jewel in the rough,” Ansley co-founder David Tufts told Homes.com, while industry watchers caution that condo conversions can come with resale and financing quirks that buyers should weigh before signing on the dotted line.

Atlanta-Real Estate & Development