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Glencoe–Auburn Hotel and Glencoe–Auburn Place Row Houses was a registered historic district in Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register of Historic Places on December 10, 2003. It contained 54 contributing buildings. The complex was originally constructed between 1884 and 1891, by a Jethro Mitchell.
Just after 1960, the hotel's Moorish towers and eaves were removed to lower maintenance costs. The third hotel was the longest-lasting. It closed on March 15, 1972 and was demolished in February 1973. [1] The high-rise William Green Building stands at the site of the hotel. The Chittenden Hotel in 1963
The Hartman Hotel is an condominium complex and former hotel and office building in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. The building was completed in 1898 [2] and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2018. [1] [3] The six-story Neoclassical building was designed by the local firm Kremer & Hart. [2]
The Hyatt Regency Columbus is a 20-story 256-foot (78 m) high-rise hotel in Columbus, Ohio, United States. [1] It is the 24th-tallest building in the city and was designed by Prindle, Patrick + Associates [1] along with the adjoining Ohio Center, which opened first, on September 10, 1980, with the hotel following on October 26, 1980 and the Greater Columbus Convention Center which opnened in ...
The building is located just north of another famous former hotel into apartment conversion, the Statler. It is one of four major hotels built in the 1910s and 1920s to pay homage to that era of construction in Cleveland, others being the Statler, the Winton Manor , and the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel , all have been re purposed except the ...
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The Golden Lamb Inn, photographed November 15, 1936. The Golden Lamb Inn is the oldest hotel in Ohio, having been established in the Warren County seat of Lebanon in 1803. It opened as a log tavern, licensed as "a house of Public Entertainment" located on the main street of Lebanon. [2]