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The President and Ambassador Apartments are two five-story apartment buildings in Lincoln, Nebraska. They were built in 1928–1929 on land owned by Levi Leland Coryell, and designed in the Art Deco style by architect John A. Alexander. [2] They belonged to the L. L. Coryell Building Corporation until 1979. [2]
The Near East side is bounded by two zip codes: 43203 and 43205. [6] As of the 2010 Census, 20,380 residents live in the 43203 and 43205 zip codes. There are 12,368 housing units in the Near East; roughly 30% of these units are unoccupied. Nearly 70% of the units in the Near East are Renter Occupied. [7]
Taylor Park: [1] An area generally located around Taylor Park in east-central Lincoln. [18] Bounded by O St to the north, A St to the south, 48th St to the west and 70th St to the east. University Place : [ 1 ] University Place is located along 48th Street between Leighton Avenue and Adams Street, near Nebraska Wesleyan University and UNL's ...
The East Side is an area made up several historic neighborhoods on the east side of Columbus, Ohio. Some neighborhoods making up the area include: Beatty Park, King-Lincoln Bronzeville, Eastgate, Franklin Park, Mt. Vernon Avenue District, Nelson Park, Olde Towne East, and Woodland Park.
Columbus is the county seat of Platte County, Nebraska, situated at the confluence of the Loup and Platte rivers roughly 85 miles (137 km) west-northwest of Omaha and 75 miles (121 km) northwest of Lincoln by road, near the county's southern edge. With an estimated population of 24,464 as of 2024, it is the 10th-most populous city in Nebraska.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 0.79 square miles (2.05 km 2), all land. [6]Clarkson is located in northeast Nebraska, three miles west of the junction of Nebraska Highways 15 and 91.
ZIP code: 68601 [2] Area code(s) 402 and 531 ... 0837934: Columbus Township is one of eighteen townships in Platte County, Nebraska, United States. The population was ...
At the time of the project in 1996 then City Councilman Michael B. Coleman, who was later the mayor of Columbus, said that the Ohio Penitentiary site is the “most important and potentially most valuable single site in downtown Columbus.” [7] After proposals were reviewed, the City Council approved the redevelopment proposal from Nationwide ...