The building is adjacent to Rhodes Hall, and houses 640 freshmen students.
It consisted of one-story buildings that ran along the north, west and south sides of Rhodes Hall.
The site of the west building is now parking behind Rhodes Hall.
Although Rhodes Hall is now surrounded by commercial buildings and heavy traffic, it has survived damage due to careful historic preservation and restoration efforts.
After the Archives moved to a more modern building, Rhodes Hall continued to provide archive services as a branch.
In 1983 Rhodes Hall was transferred to the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation, which undertook a long-term restoration program.
Rhodes Hall is used as both a historic house museum and as the offices of the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation.
In 1937, the Rhodes Center, Atlanta's first shopping center, was built on the north, west and south sides of Rhodes Hall (photo, p.5).
Walker named his property Rhodes after his grandmother's home, Rhodes Hall, in Leeds, England.
Rhodes has a building named after him on the Cornell campus in Ithaca, New York: Rhodes Hall.