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Junction of U.S. Route 77 and Omaha Creek, northeast of Homer [33: Homer: Site of Ton-won-tonga, the principal village of the Omaha people, occupied on and off from 1775 to 1845, bastion of indigenous control over trade on the Upper Missouri River. [34] 4
Omaha's economy has grown dramatically since the early 1990s. The city has five companies that rank in the Fortune 500 . It also is the smallest city to have two major research hospitals, the University of Nebraska Medical Center and Creighton University Medical Center.
Old People's Home (Omaha) Omaha Bolt, Nut and Screw Building; Omaha Bus Station; Omaha Civic Auditorium; Omaha Fire Department Hose Company No. 4; Omaha Ford Motor Company Assembly Plant; Omaha Quartermaster Depot Historic District; Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium
Skyline of Lincoln. Skyline of Omaha. This list of tallest buildings in Nebraska ranks skyscrapers in the US state of Nebraska by height for existing and proposed structures. . This list includes buildings with a minimum height of 200 feet (61 meters), and features the 23 tallest completed buildings in the state, 20 of which are located in O
The Keeline Building is an office and retail building located in downtown Omaha, Nebraska at 319 South 17th Street. The mixed-use building was completed in 1911 just before construction of the neighboring Douglas County Courthouse was completed, the seven-story Keeline was designed by locally renowned architect John Latenser, Sr.
Omaha's main airport, Eppley Airfield, is now in East Omaha, and the community has been the location of racial contention for several years. East Omaha was the first annexation to the City of Omaha in 1854. Far north Omaha includes everything north of Ames Avenue, west of Florence Boulevard, and east of 72nd Street.
The area comprising modern-day North Omaha is home to a variety of important examples of popular turn-of-the-20th-century architecture, ranging from Thomas Rogers Kimball's Spanish Renaissance Revival-style St. Cecilia Cathedral at 701 N. 40th Street to the Prairie School style of St. John's A.M.E. Church designed by Frederick S. Stott at 2402 N. 22nd Street. [1]
In 1993 the building was renovated at a cost of $3.3 million and turned into loft style apartments. It now houses 48 units. [2] In addition to being listed independently on the National Register of Historic Places individually, [6] the building is listed as a contributing property to the Warehouses in Omaha Multiple Properties Submission.