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The Haskell-Barker-Atwater Buildings at 20, 22 & 28 Wabash Avenue are part of the Jewelers Row District, as well as being designated Chicago Landmarks themselves. The Jewelers Row District is a historic district in the Loop community area of Chicago, Illinois in the United States .
The J. J. Walser Jr. residence in the Chicago, United States, neighborhood of Austin was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright [2] for real estate developer Joseph Jacob Walser Jr. The cruciform two-story house is typical of Wright's Prairie School period.
The Wm. J. Cassidy Tire Building was a building at 344 N. Canal Street, Chicago, Illinois. Designed by Henry J. Schlacks and constructed in 1902, it originally served as a factory and warehouse for the Tyler & Hippach Mirror Co. [4] [3] [5] The site was purchased for redevelopment in February 2022, with demolition commencing shortly afterward.
J Street or "J" Street also refers to the tenth of a sequence of alphabetical streets in many cities (if "I" or "J" is not omitted). J Street may also refer to: J Street U, J Street's college and university campus organizing arm; J Street (Washington, D.C.), the (non-existent) street in Washington, D.C. J Street, the former dining hall and food ...
Lake Street (Chicago) LaSalle Street; Lincoln Avenue (Chicago) Logan Square Boulevards Historic District; Loomis Street; M. Madison Street (Chicago) Magnificent Mile;
J Street, as an American lobby organization aimed at Washington leaders and policymakers, derived its name from the alphabetically named street plan of Washington, D.C.: J Street is missing from the grid (the street naming jumps from I Street to K Street since I and J were not yet considered to be distinct letters at the time the Washington street plan was created). [15]
The brownstone that rests at 66 Perry Street in Manhattan's Greenwich Village became a bustling hotspot for fans of the HBO series since featuring in season 1 of Sex and the City in 1998 ...
The John J. Glessner House, operated as the Glessner House, is an architecturally important 19th-century residence located at 1800 S. Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Built during the Gilded Age , it was designed in 1885–1886 by architect Henry Hobson Richardson and completed in late 1887.