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Harrisburg Technical High School, also known as Old City Hall, is a historic building and former high school located in Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. Though previously used as a high school, vocational school, and municipal building, it is now converted for apartments. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 ...
Neighborhood of Harrisburg Section of John A. F. Hall Manor as seen from 17th Street Coordinates: 40°15′00″N 76°51′28″W / 40.2500°N 76.8577°W / 40.2500; -76
Atherton Hall. South Halls offers housing for Schreyer Honors College students in Atherton and Simmons, and in addition offers male, female and co-ed residence halls. [5] [6] At one point both McElwain Hall and Simmons Hall both contained a dining complex, but as of May 2011 their dining areas were eliminated to increase residential room space. [7]
The South Harrisburg district boundary includes I-83 to the north, the city line to the south and east, and the Susquehanna River to the west. Cloverly Heights; Frog Hollow [7] (antiquated, demolished) Hall Manor; Hoverter Homes; Lochiel [8] (antiquated) Sheesleytown [9] (antiquated, demolished)
Additionally, the Scattered Site program facilitates eighty more family housing residences throughout the city. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development also funds HHA's Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) Program, which maintains 1,200 vouchers in the area to promote more options for living.
The Ronald Reagan Federal Building and Courthouse (Federal Building for short) at 228 Walnut Street in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania is a twelve-story former courts facility located in the central business district of the city. The building, built in 1966, is named for former President Ronald Reagan. [1] It was officially renamed on March 9, 2004.
The Pennsylvania Governor's Residence is the official residence of the governor of Pennsylvania, in the Uptown neighborhood of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.The neo-Georgian residence was built from 1966 to 1968 and designed by George M. Ewing, heading an architectural firm in Philadelphia. [2]
This district includes fifty contributing buildings that are located in the old central business district of Harrisburg. Dating from the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, notable buildings include the Daily and Weekly Telegraph Building (1873-1874), the City Bank Building (c. 1872), F.W. Woolworth (1939), Rothert's Furniture Store (1906), Bowman's Department Store (1907, 1910 ...