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Rhine House is the most prominent, built from 1883 to 1884 and designed by Albert Schroepfer. The house has elaborate interiors, and was used to entertain visitors of the property. The house was built on the site of the Hudson House (built c. 1848–52), which was moved nearby in order in 1883 to build the larger and grander Rhine House.
English: Rhine House at Beringer Vineyards, St. Helena, Napa County, California This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America .
English: Rhine House at Beringer Vineyards, St. Helena, Napa County, California This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America .
Downtown 2004 Renaissance Pittsburgh Hotel (Fulton Building) 1906 Grosvenor Atterbury: 107 Sixth Street Downtown 2003 Lydia A. Riesmeyer house: 1914 Richard Kiehnel, Kiehnel and Elliott: 5818 Aylesboro Avenue Squirrel Hill 2014 Riverview United Presbyterian Church (Watson Memorial Presbyterian Church) 1907 Allison & Allison
Pittsburgh Press Building (1927; remodeled in 1962) Allegheny Towers (1967) The only non-contributing properties within the district boundaries are the former State Office Building (1957), which was considered to have lost its architectural integrity due to a 1980s remodeling, and the Gateway light rail station , which was built in 2012.
From 1999 to 2001, Heinz built a 70,000-square-foot (6,500 m 2) warehouse on the east side and moved its headquarters to downtown Pittsburgh. [10] By 2001, many of the historic buildings had been vacant for five to eight years. Heinz had no long-term plans for the buildings and sold them to a residential developer. [11]
The Gateway Center is a complex of office, residential, and hotel buildings covering 25 acres (10 ha) [1] in Downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It lies between Commonwealth Place and Stanwix Street at the western edge of the central business district, immediately to the east of Point State Park.
Located at the corner of Liberty Avenue and Fifth Avenue, it rises 616 feet (188 m) above downtown Pittsburgh. The structure is made up of a unique granite frame for roughly the first 450 feet (140 m), then collapses inward in a pyramidal shape for another 124-foot-tall (38 m) roof structure.