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77000600 [1] Added to NRHP. August 2, 1977. The Sauer Castle is an Italianate architecture home at 935 Shawnee Road in Kansas City, Kansas, built from 1871 to 1873. It was designed by famed architect Asa Beebe Cross [2] as the residence of Anton Sauer. He had married Francesca in Vienna, Austria at age eighteen and a half.
2345 McGee Street. PBNDML Architects. 504 / 153. 45. 1980. Tallest hotel in Missouri; Formerly Hyatt Regency, now Sheraton, in the Crown Center District. 4. Kansas City Power and Light Building. 1330 Baltimore Street.
City workhouse castle (Vine Street workhouse castle, Brant Castle [3]) is a city historical register site located at 2001 Vine Street in Kansas City, Missouri.The castle was constructed by contractors in 1897 for US$25,700 (equivalent to $941,000 in 2023) next to the natural deposit of yellow limestone which had been quarried by inmates of the preceding city workhouse jail across Vine Street.
Wight and Wight, known also as Wight & Wight, was an architecture firm in Kansas City, Missouri consisting of the brothers Thomas Wight (September 17, 1874 – October 6, 1949) [1] and William Wight (January 22, 1882 – October 29, 1947) [2] who designed several landmark buildings in Missouri and Kansas. The brothers were born in Halifax, Nova ...
Pages in category "Architects from Kansas City, Missouri" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. H.
Architecture of Kansas City. The historic Power & Light Building was built in 1933 with heavy art deco elements (2020). Downtown Kansas City can be viewed from the south at Hospital Hill Park (2020). The architecture of Kansas City encompasses the metropolitan area, anchored by Kansas City, Missouri (KCMO).
The Kansas City Zoo & Aquarium is a 202-acre (82 ha) zoo founded in 1909 and is located in Swope Park at 6800 Zoo Drive, Kansas City, Missouri, in the United States. The zoo has a Friends of the Zoo program to help promote the work of the zoo which sees over one million visitors a year. The zoo is home to nearly 1,700 animals and the aquarium ...
Also on the property is a contributing carriage house. The house was built for a Dr. Generous Henderson (1844–1924). His medical practice in Kansas City went on for forty-five years. The house is one of the few surviving examples of the Second Renaissance Revival style of architecture in Kansas City. [2]: 2, 7