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West Side: 65: Kansas City Club Building: Kansas City Club Building: November 19, 2002 : 1228 Baltimore Ave. Downtown: 66: Kansas City Cold Storage Company Building: Kansas City Cold Storage Company Building: June 1, 2005 : 500 E. 3rd St.
Shillington is a borough in Berks County, Pennsylvania, United States. With a population of 5,475 at the time of the 2020 census [ 3 ] the borough is nestled amongst other suburbs outside Reading . It is perhaps best known for being the location of the homestead to Pennsylvania's first governor, Thomas Mifflin , [ 4 ] and as the childhood home ...
Dan Lowe is a Kansas City based real estate developer [1] who has developed retail projects around the country, among them the Legends Outlets Kansas City. [2] One of the early proponents of open-air shopping malls, called lifestyle centers, [3] Lowe and his companies have sometimes generated controversy for a reliance on public/private partnerships. [4]
The 1201 Walnut Building is a skyscraper located in Downtown Kansas City, Missouri, US, built by HNTB Architects in 1991. [3] Found at the intersection of 12th and Walnut streets, it is the eighth tallest habitable structure in the Kansas City Metropolitan Area, and the twelfth-tallest habitable structure in Missouri, at 427 feet.
Linwood Boulevard is a boulevard and major east–west street in Kansas City, Missouri, United States. Linwood begins at Broadway Boulevard in the Valentine and Old Hyde Park neighborhoods and travels 3.8 miles east through Midtown to Van Brunt Boulevard near Interstate 70 in the Kansas City East Side. For much of its length, it creates a high ...
The Loretto is a multipurpose venue in the Westport neighborhood of Kansas City, Missouri. It was adapted from a former girls' academy known as Loretto Academy, dedicated in 1904 [2] as a "boarding and day school for girls." [3] It is named after the Sisters of Loretto, who established a presence in Kansas City in 1899. [4]
Quality Hill is a historic neighborhood near downtown Kansas City, Missouri, USA, on a 200-foot-high bluff which overlooks the confluence of the Kansas and Missouri rivers in the West Bottoms below. Located on the west side of downtown, it is bounded by Broadway to the east, I-35 to the west, 7th Street to the north, and 14th Street to the south.
Most of the homes in Blue Hills were built in the 1910s and 1920s. From its early years until the 1960s nearly all of the residents of Blue Hills were white and most were working class, making it a working white neighborhood In the early 1960s, the racial composition of the neighborhood changed due to blockbusting, and in the 1970s more than 95% of Blue Hills residents were African-American.