Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
400 N. Olive Street Dallas, Texas: Coordinates: Opening: April 12, 1959 (entire Southland Center complex became a hotel in 1998) Cost: US$35 million: Height: 167.64 m (550.0 ft) Technical details; Floor count: 42: Design and construction; Architect(s) Welton Becket & Associates
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
400 Central, also known as Residence 400 Central or Residences at 400 Central, is a 515 feet (157 m) tall residential building under construction in St. Petersburg, Florida. Located at the intersection of Central Avenue and 4th Street, it is the tallest building currently topped-out in St. Petersburg and will be the tallest residential building ...
The United States Tax Court Building is a courthouse located at 400 Second Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C., in the Judiciary Square neighborhood. It serves as the headquarters of the United States Tax Court. Built in 1972, the building and its landscaped plaza occupy the entire block bound by D Street, E Street, Second Street, and Third ...
300 South Tryon is an office high rise in Charlotte, North Carolina. [3] With a height of 463 feet (141 m), [1] it is the 10th tallest building in Charlotte. [4] It was completed in 2017. [5] Ground breaking was on December 15, 2014, and construction was completed on November 16, 2017.
Variety Wholesalers, Inc., is a privately held company based in Henderson, North Carolina, which owns more than 380 retail stores in the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic United States under the banners Roses and Maxway. The company employs more than 7,000 workers.
The ad featured nearly 400 photos of Taco Bell customers, from more than 3,000 who drove photobooth cameras at the chain’s drive-ins this past December, according to the company. SCORE UPDATE ...
The Inquirer Building, formerly called the Elverson Building, is an eighteen-story building at the intersection of North Broad and Callowhill Streets in the Logan Square neighborhood of Center City Philadelphia, completed in 1924 as the new home for The Philadelphia Inquirer, a daily newspaper in the city, that was joined by the Philadelphia Daily News in 1957.