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Hotel Muehlebach (1915), known in 1983 as Radisson Muehlebach Hotel [2] New Yorker Hotel [2] Hotel Phillips [2] In addition to the district, two other hotels were individually listed on the National Register at the same time: Continental Hotel (1923), 106 West 11th Street, a 23-story building that was built as Kansas City Athletic Club. Known ...
The Monroe Hotel was a hotel in Kansas City, Missouri. It was built in the early 1920s and soon afterward bought by Tom Pendergast, a local political boss, who arranged for connecting access between his office and the hotel. The hotel closed in 1971, and the building was later converted to condominium use.
The hotel closed in 1980. It later underwent a $45.5 million restoration by developer Ron Jury and reopened in 2005 as the Hilton President Kansas City. The hotel is managed by Jury Hotel Group of Overland Park, Kansas. The hotel's General Manager is Philip Strnad. Additional renovations were completed in 2017.
Sheraton Kansas City Hotel at Crown Center: 2345 McGee Street: ... American Institute of Architects Guide to Kansas City Architecture & Public Art. pp. 21, 23, 25, 26
The Savoy Hotel and Grill was a historic hotel and restaurant in Kansas City, Missouri. The Savoy Hotel was the oldest continuously operating hotel in the United States west of the Mississippi River until it closed in 2016 to undergo extensive renovation by 21c Museum Hotels and reopened in 2018. [ 2 ]
The Hotel Phillips, a historic 217-room hotel located on 12th Street in downtown Kansas City, Missouri, opened in 1931. [2] The site was formerly occupied by the Glennon Hotel, in which Harry S. Truman operated a haberdashery shop. [2] That hotel was demolished, and the Phillips was constructed at a cost of $1.6 million, opening in February ...
The Midwest Hotel is a hotel located in Kansas City, Missouri. The hotel is a building dating from 1915, and is located in the Crossroads Arts District. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 2004. [1] It is currently vacant, sold on the Jackson County Courthouse steps, and is possibly at risk of demolition.
Built from 1921 to 1923 by J.O. Jones of the Armour Building Company, the intended name was "Le Pavonien" but the initial name was the Peacock Hotel. It was renamed the Newbern Hotel in 1925 when Beine H. Hopkins bought the property. It was listed on the NRHP on September 23, 1980. [2]