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The Downtown Clubhouse is located at 405 Washington Avenue, at the corner of Fourth Street, adjacent to the entrance to the Eads Bridge on the Missouri side. Designed by William B. Ittner , the clubhouse contains two restaurants, a ballroom, a barber shop, numerous private meeting rooms, a reading room, a billiard parlor, a rooftop deck, more ...
Louis also was the headquarters for postwar modernist bank designer Wenceslaus Sarmiento, whose major work in St. Louis is the Chancery Building (1965) on the grounds of the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis. The culmination of St. Louis modern architecture is Eero Saarinen's magnificent stainless-steel gesture, the Gateway Arch, centerpiece of ...
The St. Louis Club in 1909. Completed in 1900, the four-story building originally hosted the St. Louis Club, an organization founded in 1878. [2] The principal architect of the building was Arthur Dillon of the New York firm Friedlander and Dillon. [1] While hosting the St. Louis Club, the building became the location of many historical moments.
Marquette Building (St. Louis) Marquette Hotel (St. Louis) Maryland Hotel; Mayfair Hotel (St. Louis, Missouri) McKinley Classical Leadership Academy; Medium Security Institution; Merchants Exchange Building (St. Louis) Metro Academic and Classical High School; Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum; Millennium Hotel St. Louis; Mississippi Valley Trust ...
Postcard of Liederkranz Club, ca. 1910. This image shows the club building at South Grand and Magnolia. The Liederkranz Club of St. Louis, Missouri was a German-American social club and the term also refers to its building. The building was a work of William Albert Hirsch of the St. Louis architectural firm Helfensteller, Hirsch & Watson. [1] [2]
901 Jules, St. Joseph, 1950 Benton High School, St. Joseph, 1940; Missouri Theater and Missouri Theater Building, St. Joseph, 1927; Regal Cinema (now furniture store ...
Gaslight Square (also known as Greenwich Corners) [1] was an entertainment district in St. Louis, Missouri active in the 1950s and 60s, covering an area of about three blocks at the intersection of Olive and Boyle, near the eastern part of the current Central West End and close to the current Grand Center Arts District.
1906 Barr Branch, St. Louis Public Library; 1908 Wednesday Club building and auditorium in St. Louis, Missouri [13] 1910 Roberts Shoe (International Shoe) Company Building, St. Louis, with ornament influenced by Louis Sullivan; 1911 Theodore Link Historic Buildings, 7100, 7104 and 7108 Delmar Blvd, University City, Missouri [2]