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The Railway Exchange Addition of 1909/13 and the connected Railway Exchange New Building of 1937 (now the Hotel Monaco) in downtown Denver show contrasting styles by the same firm. The New Building, by Fisher, Fisher & Hubbell, is one of Denver's best Art Moderne works, [6] although the architects denied at the time that it was "modernistic". [7]
The locations of National Register properties and districts may be seen in an online map. [1] There are 314 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Denver, including 1 National Historic Landmark. Downtown Denver includes 151 of these properties and districts, including the National Historic Landmark and 2 that extend into ...
103 Equitable Building, 730 17th Street, 453 1977 c. 1892–1893 Downtown Denver. 9-story commercial building, Denver's tallest building from 1892–1911. 104 1375 Josephine Street / Gates House, 1375 Josephine Street 492 1977 1892. NRHP-listed. 105 Colorado Federal Building / Ideal Building, 821 17th Street 550 1977 1907, addition 1927 ...
Engineering News Record's "Top 500 Design Firms" – Fentress Architects ranked #29 among architecture-only firms [26] Engineering News Record's "Top Airport Design Firms" – Fentress Architects ranked in top 25 firms; In 2003, Colorado Construction ranked Fentress Architects as the Top Architectural Firm in Colorado. [27]
The properties are distributed across 48 of Denver's 79 official neighborhoods.For the purposes of this list, the city is split into four regions: West Denver, which includes all of the city west of the South Platte River; Downtown Denver, which includes the neighborhoods of Capitol Hill, Central Business District, Civic Center, Five Points, North Capitol Hill, and Union Station; and Northeast ...
The building at 521 N. Boonville Ave. was built in 1946 as a tractor sales business. Dake Wells Architecture has plans to make it the firm's new home.
A cap over Interstate 670 in downtown Kansas City would create a large, urban park that would connect the Central Business District and attractions like the T-Mobile arena with the Crossroads Arts ...
Fentress then moved to Denver, Colorado as the Kohn Pedersen Fox's Project Designer for the Rocky Mountain Headquarters of Amoco in downtown Denver. Denver was chosen as the base for his new firm, C.W. Fentress and Associates with James Henry Bradburn. In 2004, Bradburn retired and in 2007 the firm's name was abbreviated from Fentress Bradburn ...