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Buffalo City Hall is the seat for municipal government in the City of Buffalo, New York. Located at 65 Niagara Square , the 32-story Art Deco building was completed in 1931 by Dietel, Wade & Jones. The 398-foot-tall (121.3 m) building [ 2 ] is one of the largest and tallest municipal buildings in the United States and is also one of the tallest ...
New York Central Black Rock Freight House: May 18, 2018 (#MP100002461) 68–120 Tonawanda St. Black Rock: Only remaining rail freight house in the city 124: New York Central Terminal: New York Central Terminal
Cincinnati City Hall is the seat of the municipal government of Cincinnati, Ohio. Completed in 1893, the Richardsonian Romanesque structure was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on December 11, 1972. The building was designed by Samuel Hannaford at a cost of $1.61 million.
Again, major city institutions are common here, such as Xavier University in Evanston and Cincinnati Gardens, the city’s former NBA venue in Bond Hill. Just west of Downtown, I-75 follows the Mill Creek Valley as it winds its way north from the river. The Mill Creek Valley is the industrial heart of the city and the center of production ...
St. Paul's Cathedral (Buffalo, New York) Saturn Club; School 87; Seneca Buffalo Creek Casino; Sibley and Holmwood Candy Factory and Witkop and Holmes Headquarters; Sinclair, Rooney & Co. Building; Sisters of Charity Hospital (Buffalo) St. Francis Hospital (Buffalo, New York) Statler Hotels; Statue of Christopher Columbus (Buffalo, New York)
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Buffalo, New York) St. Andrew's Evangelical Lutheran Church Complex; St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Parish Complex; St. Paul's Cathedral (Buffalo, New York) Saturn Club; School 13; Shea's Performing Arts Center; Sibley and Holmwood Candy Factory and Witkop and Holmes Headquarters; Sinclair, Rooney & Co ...
Art Deco detail of Buffalo City Hall Niagara Square during the Taste of Buffalo in 2008. The Architecture of Buffalo, New York, particularly the buildings constructed between the American Civil War and the Great Depression, is said to have created a new, distinctly American form of architecture and to have influenced design throughout the world.
Tallest building in Upstate New York and also second-tallest building in New York State at the time of its construction, only two feet (61 cm) shorter than the Park Row Building in New York City. 1902–1912 Saint Paul's Episcopal Cathedral: 275 / 84 N/A Tallest building in Upstate New York during this time. 1912–1925 Electric Tower 294 / 90 14