Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
62M is a 41-unit condominium building in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, built by 5468796 Architecture. [1] [2] [3]Named after its street address, 62 MacDonald Avenue, [4] the three-storey, circular structure sits on 12-metre (39 ft) high concrete columns and hovers next to the Disraeli Freeway at the edge of downtown Winnipeg and the Red River.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Standing at 141.7 metres and 42 storeys, it is the tallest building in Winnipeg as well as in Manitoba. [4] [5] Located near the intersection of Portage and Main in downtown Winnipeg, the building is connected to the Winnipeg Walkway System, as well as other buildings owned by Artis REIT, including 330 Main and the Winnipeg Square parkade. [6]
The Marquette Bungalows Historic District is part of a neighborhood developed from 1924 to 1930 on the isthmus of Madison, Wisconsin, United States, holding the largest group of Craftsman-style bungalows in the city. In 1997 the district was added to the National Register of Historic Places. [1] [2]
Membership in a condo is obtained by buying the shares on the open market, most often through a real estate agent. No board approval is needed to buy shares, but in some cases other stockholders or the housing cooperative itself has the right to claim the stocks being sold. There is usually no requirement for the owner(s) to live in the condo.
Winnipeg's history of towers began with the Union Bank Tower (1904), the National Bank Building (1911), and the Hotel Fort Garry in 1913. Buildings in the city remained relatively short in the city until the late 1960s when the city experienced its first skyscraper boom, with the construction of the Richardson Building, Holiday Towers, and Grain Exchange Tower, all being constructed during ...
There are four model 7a duplexes, a model B1 bungalow, [11] and a model C3 bungalow. It is the only grouping of Frank Lloyd Wright-designed homes that includes both duplexes and single-family dwellings. Three of the homes have been purchased by the Frank Lloyd Wright Wisconsin Program.
1913 home of progressive and influential UW economist John R. Commons - a bungalow designed by Cora Tuttle, the first woman known to practice architecture in Wisconsin. 29: Coolidge Street-Myrtle Street Historic District: Coolidge Street-Myrtle Street Historic District: March 30, 2020 : 2301-2826 Myrtle St., 2302-2826 Coolidge St.