Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The city of Des Moines plans to purchase and fix up an endangered historic building in the Highland Park neighborhood. City inspectors designated the 117-year-old International Order of Odd ...
The Evert House is a historic house at 2687 Logan Street in Highland Park, Illinois.The Highland Park Building Company built the house for Rev. W. W. Evert in 1872. The company, which built houses that buyers chose from pattern books, was responsible for many of Highland Park's early homes and community buildings.
The building was designed by Alexander Merchant (1872-1952), the architect responsible for numerous notable buildings in Highland Park, particularly in the Livingston Manor Historic District. [4] [5] It was his first design for Highland Park. [6] [7] The auditorium wing is circa 1920. [8] The buildings have been equipped with solar panels. [9]
The Highland Park Building Company built the house without a buyer, as it expected that the new city would attract many affluent Chicagoans in the coming years. Its design includes a yellow brick exterior, bracketed eaves, and a widow's walk. The Highland Park Historical Society bought the house in 1969 and converted it to a historic house ...
A one-stop-shop for the newly betrothed is coming to Des Moines' Highland Park neighborhood. The French Way Cleaners & Dyers building, which shuttered in 2018 after 109 years in business, will ...
The retired NBA legend's sprawling Highland Park estate has been on the market on and off since 2012 Reuters 3 months ago Realtors group forecasts US 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaging 6% in 2025
The Highland Park Historic Business District at Euclid and Sixth Avenues is located in the north-central section of Des Moines, Iowa, United States. It is located on the border of the Oak Park and Highland Park neighborhoods. The commercial historic district has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1998. [1]
The college was founded in 1889 just after the Highland Park Land Company opened up this section of Des Moines for residential development. The College Corner commercial district was associated with the college's professors and students who in general lived nearby and patronized the establishments at the intersection of Second and Euclid Avenues.