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[4] The hotel was demolished on June 26, 1983 in front of a large crowd and widely reported on in national media [5] and its longtime neighbor, the Terrace Ballroom, was demolished a few years later. Despite early plans to redevelop the block, the site eventually became part of a 10-acre parking lot that is now owned by City Creek Reserve. [6]
The Joseph Smith Memorial Building (JSMB), originally called the Hotel Utah, is a social center located on the corner of Main Street and South Temple in Salt Lake City. It is named in honor of Joseph Smith , founder of the Latter Day Saint movement .
Central City: 172: Salt Lake City East Side Historic District: Salt Lake City East Side Historic District: August 22, 1996 : Roughly bounded by South Temple, 1100 East, 400 South, University Ave., 900 South, and 500 East
The Salt Lake City Union Pacific Depot is a building on the western edge of downtown Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. Built in 1908–09, it dates back to the more prosperous era in the history of American railroad travel. As Salt Lake Union Pacific Railroad Station, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
California Zephyr at the depot on its last western run, 1970. The depot was constructed by the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad in 1910 at a cost of US$750,000. [2] The depot was the main jewel of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, and was designed by Chicago architect Henry Schlacks, who was best known in Chicago for his design of churches, but had also designed the Denver and ...
East of Salt Lake City in Mountain Dell Canyon, near the junction of State Route 65 and the road to Emigration Canyon (see Utah State Route 239 (1947-1969) 40°46′40″N 111°41′09″W / 40.777778°N 111.685833°W / 40.777778; -111.685833 ( Little Dell
The north-south line begins at the Salt Lake City Intermodal Hub (Salt Lake Central) in the western part of Downtown Salt Lake City and runs south to the center of Draper. There are also lines that run east to the University of Utah, west to the Salt Lake City International Airport, west to West Valley City, and southwest to South Jordan.
The Knutsford Hotel was built in downtown Salt Lake City in 1891. [4] The architects were the Omaha-based firm of Mendelssohn, Fisher and Lawrie. [4] The general contractors, also from Omaha, were Rocheford & Gould. The hotel was a 132-foot-by-132-foot Victorian-influenced structure built primarily of granite at a cost of $750,000. [4]