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Miami-Dade County was the first in Florida to certify hurricane-resistant standards for structures which the Florida Building Code subsequently enacted across all requirements for hurricane-resistant buildings. Many other states reference the requirements set in the Florida Building codes, or have developed their own requirements for hurricanes ...
Wellington officially became a village on December 31, 1995, as a state revenue sharing program required it to exist in 1995 in order to be eligible for funding in 1996. The village became Palm Beach County's 38th municipality and the ninth most populous city in the county at the time, with approximately 28,000 residents. [14]
Theatres in Wellington City (8 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Wellington City" The following 119 pages are in this category, out of 119 total.
Lord & Taylor closed in 2004, and in 2007, that building was split into three tenants: City Furniture on the lower level, and Ashley Furniture and La-Z-Boy on the upper level. La-Z-Boy closed in 2014 to make room for Paragon Theaters, which opened on February 10, 2017, and was purchased by CMX Cinemas on September 19 of the same year.
Wellington Gas Company Building (Former) Historic Place Category 2: 58–64 Courtenay Place: 3642: Ford Motor Company Workshops: Historic Place Category 2: 3–9 Ebor Street: 3643: Wellington Free Ambulance Building (Former) Historic Place Category 1: 5–9 Cable Street and Jervois Quay: 3644: Wellington Central Fire Station: Historic Place ...
The Public Trust Building in May 2015 being renovated. Doubts about the building's future were (again) raised following the 2013 Seddon earthquake. [1] Most of the building's tenants were evacuated following the earthquake. [3] Creative New Zealand's Wellington office had been in the building since 1985. After the building's body corporate ...
The Wellington Harbour Board archives, from its founding in 1880 [16] The hand-drawn maps of Thomas Ward, who spent three years in the 1880s walking around Wellington sketching street plans [17] Building permits from 1892 and all completed contemporary resource and building consents (only live consents are held at the City Council offices) [3] [8]
The university administration opposed the Wellington City Council's attempt to list the Hunter Building as a heritage building, and the then mayor and architect Michael Fowler, allegedly described the university as a “bloody pack of rascals.” This insult apparently reflected Fowler's opinion that the universities consultants had inflated ...