Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The building was constructed as the headquarters for Armstrong Rubber Company, including office and research space. [6] The building originally had 183,000 square feet (17,000 m 2 ), [ 6 ] though IKEA demolished about 64,000 sq ft (5,900 m 2 ) of the building in 2003; the surviving structure is estimated at 107,100 sq ft (9,950 m 2 ).
Permanent school that grew out of a meeting of New Haven citizens in 1864. New Haven architect Henry Austin donated the design. Used as a school until 1874 when African-American children began attending previously all white public schools. The building was then used by African-American community organizations. [19] 24
The Hotel Marcel is a zero-emission hotel encompassing 165 rooms, a 9,000-plus square-foot conference center, and a full service restaurant.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on de.wikipedia.org Benutzer:Carl Ha/Architektur XX/Vereinigte Staaten; Usage on es.wikipedia.org
1969 Armstrong Rubber/Pirelli Tire Building; 1969 Soriano House – Greenwich, Connecticut – with Tician Papachristou; 1970 University of Massachusetts – Campus Center – Amherst, Massachusetts – with Herbert Beckhard; 1970 Yale University – Becton Laboratory Building – New Haven, Connecticut – with Hamilton Smith
The M. Armstrong and Company Carriage Factory is a historic carriage factory building at 433 Chapel St. in New Haven, Connecticut. Built in 1882, it is one of a small number of surviving 19th-century carriage factories in a city that once had more than 50 such businesses. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011. [1]
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. is a Pennsylvania corporation incorporated in 1891. [2] It is an international designer and manufacturer of wall and ceiling building materials. Based in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, AWI has a global manufacturing network of 26 facilities, including nine plants dedicated to its WAVE joint venture. [3]
The district is architecturally significant for three reasons. First, its core embraces numerous examples of period industrial structures. Second, the majority of these structures were built for the Winchester Repeating Arms Company according to designs provided by Leoni W. Robinson, one of New Haven's premier late 19/early 20th-century ...