Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The South Eighth Street Historic District in Boise, Idaho, is an area of approximately 8 acres (3.2 ha) that includes 22 commercial buildings generally constructed between 1902 and 1915. The buildings are of brick, many with stone cornices and rounded arches, and are between one and four stories in height.
Eighth & Main is an 18-story high-rise building in the western United States, located in Boise, Idaho. [3] The tallest building in the state at 323 feet (98 m), it houses the Idaho headquarters of Zions Bank, as well as Holland & Hart and other companies. [4]
The Boise City National Bank building was constructed on a corner lot measuring 70 feet on West Idaho Street and 60 feet on North 8th Street, [7] and within the building the bank occupied commercial space 25 feet by 53 feet. Other storefront space opened onto 8th Street and Idaho Street.
The Montandon Building is a 2-story, brick and sandstone commercial building designed by J.W. Smith and completed in 1908. [5] August F. Montandon had owned the northeast corner lot at N 8th St and W Idaho St since 1899, [6] and Montandon buildings were demolished to build the new Montandon Building, [7] constructed to house the Anderson-Blomquist Department Store, later known as George A ...
The market is located on the Grove Plaza and on 8th Street between Main and Idaho. ... The McClaskeys then head out from their Caldwell farm to Boise around 7 a.m. with a van chock-full of goods.
The Charles Paynton House in Boise, Idaho, is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, Colonial Revival or Shingled Colonial house designed by Tourtellotte & Co. and constructed in 1900. The house features a lateral ridge beam with side facing gables with a smaller, front facing gabled dormer window above an L-shaped porch. [2]
With summer on the horizon, downtown Boise’s entertainment corridor on 8th Street is abuzz with food, drink and patio socializing. Starting this weekend, a new concept will debut.
Wolters then operated smelting and mining operations near Idaho City until 1905, and he returned to Boise in that year to manage his rental properties, building the bungalow at 712-716 N 8th Street in 1908. He constructed the second "double house" at 712-716 N 8th Street in 1909 and occupied one side of the building as his family residence. [2]