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Museums in Newark, Delaware (5 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Newark, Delaware" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
The Halo is a three-tower residential skyscraper complex under construction in Newark, New Jersey, which will include some of tallest buildings in the city. It is located on Washington Street west of Four Corners in Downtown Newark, situated between Teacher's Village and the Essex County Government Complex. The project was designed by INOA ...
National Newark Building † 466 ft (142 m) 35 1931 John H. & Wilson C. Ely, architects. Tallest building in Newark since its completion in 1931. Tallest building constructed in New Jersey in the 1930s; remained tallest building in the state for 58 years, until 1989. [7] [8] [9] 2 Halo Tower 1: 454 ft (138 m) - 42 2024 INOA Architecture.
The top eight floors of the Newark Trust building were removed, possibly in the 1980s, due to structural issues and connected with the former Kings building. kmallett@newarkadvocate.com 740-973-4539
The developer, Contour Companies of Bloomfield Hills, is now looking to fill the upper floors of the old Hudson's with a 150-room boutique hotel. For the department store's lower floors, a market ...
The new Revival Room restaurant and bar, which opened in Hudson last month in a 189-year-old building, is having some fun with history. The new Revival Room restaurant and bar, which opened in ...
Old College Historic District is a national historic district located at Newark in New Castle County, Delaware. It consists of six contributing buildings: Old College, Recitation Hall, Recitation Annex, Alumni Hall, Mechanical Hall, and Elliott House. These buildings formed the nucleus, and until the 20th century, the entire campus of Delaware ...
The company's uptown headquarters building at 300 Broadway in Newark was designed by locally important architects John H. & Wilson C. Ely. Finished in 1925, it's listed in the National Register of Historic Places. In the mid 1950s the building was sold to the Archdiocese of Newark and served as home to Essex Catholic High School until 1979.