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Architecture of Columbus, Ohio to find lists of architects and their works; List of destroyed heritage of the United States; List of public art in Columbus, Ohio, including several no longer extant; North Graveyard, no longer extant; Columbus Landmarks, a preservation organization; S.G. Loewendick & Sons, known for demolishing city landmarks
Topping the complaint list were cell-phone companies, with 38,420 complaints, up 41% over 2010. After that, the list includes (in order of number of gripes): new-car dealers
The Michael B. Coleman Government Center is an eight-story, 196,000-square-foot (18,200 m 2) municipal office building. [1] The building is named for former mayor Michael B. Coleman in recognition of his 16 years as mayor and numerous accomplishments. [2]
By April of that year, the Ohio Department of Education was looking for a new headquarters, and eventually chose the building, which it still occupies today. [6] 145 South Front Street later housed the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, followed by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services (ODJFS), until 2006. At that time, the department ...
The Columbus Division of Police (CPD) is the primary law enforcement agency for the city of Columbus, Ohio, in the United States. It is the largest police department in Ohio, and among the twenty-five largest in the United States. [2] [3] It is composed of twenty precincts and numerous other investigative and support units. Chief Elaine Bryant ...
Westland Mall is a demolished 860,000-square-foot (80,000 m 2) shopping center located at the intersection of U.S. Route 40 and Interstate 270 on the west side of Columbus, Ohio. In November 2012, the majority of the mall closed, and the last anchor closed in 2017. A mixed use development is planned, and demolition began around August 2023.
The tallest building by height in the U.S. city of Columbus, Ohio, is the 41-story Rhodes State Office Tower, which rises 629 feet (192 m) and was completed in 1973. [1] The structure is the fifth-tallest completed building in the state, [2] and is also Ohio's tallest building that rises in the center of a city block. [1]
West Columbus is defined as the entire southwest side of Columbus, bordered on the north by interstates 70 and 670, within Interstate 71 on the east, and on the south and west by the city limits that reach several miles to the outside of the I-270 outerbelt. It covers the ZIP Codes 43223, 43204, 43228, and 43222.