Ada Odd Fellows Temple

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ada_Odd_Fellows_Temple an entity of type: Thing

The Ada Odd Fellows Temple stood at 109-1151⁄2 N. 9th Street in Boise, Idaho. Built in 1903 by the prominent local architecture firm of Tourtellotte and Co. (later Tourtellotte & Hummel), it served as the clubhouse of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows of Ada Lodge No. 3. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, due largely to its association with Tourtellotte. Its sandstone masonry was quarried from nearby Table Rock. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ada Odd Fellows Temple
rdf:langString Ada Odd Fellows Temple
rdf:langString Ada Odd Fellows Temple
xsd:float 43.61611175537109
xsd:float -116.2041702270508
xsd:integer 29105913
xsd:integer 1079389516
xsd:date 1982-11-17
rdf:langString John E. Tourtellotte & Company
rdf:langString Renaissance, Late Medieval
rdf:langString less than one acre
xsd:integer 1903
rdf:langString Remains of the building's facade, with the modern Plaza 121 building in the background.
xsd:integer 109
rdf:langString Idaho#USA
rdf:langString Ada Odd Fellows Temple
xsd:integer 82000176
xsd:string 43.61611111111111 -116.20416666666667
rdf:langString The Ada Odd Fellows Temple stood at 109-1151⁄2 N. 9th Street in Boise, Idaho. Built in 1903 by the prominent local architecture firm of Tourtellotte and Co. (later Tourtellotte & Hummel), it served as the clubhouse of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows of Ada Lodge No. 3. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, due largely to its association with Tourtellotte. Its sandstone masonry was quarried from nearby Table Rock. In 1953, the north half of the building was demolished, and construction began on the First Security Building (now known as Plaza 121) in its place. Also demolished at the time was the building's original ornate, Gothic-style entrance. In 1990, the Odd Fellows sold the remaining building to First Security (now part of Wells Fargo). Over the objections of some members of the Idaho State Historical Society, First Security demolished the remaining Odd Fellows building in 1994, citing concerns about the building's condition. In its place, First Security created a "pocket park" that included a low wall made from some of the temple's original sandstone. The remainder of the stone was donated to the Idaho Shakespeare Festival, which used it in the construction of its outdoor theater on Warm Springs Avenue, and to the Boise School District, which used it in the restoration of the Bown House, an 1879 building on the campus of Riverside Elementary School. The park only existed for a little over a decade; in 2005, the First Security Building was renovated and expanded to become Plaza 121, which covers much of the lot, although the wall built from the Odd Fellows Temple's sandstone can still be seen in front of the Berryhill & Co. restaurant that now occupies the ground floor of the site.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4501
xsd:string 82000176
xsd:gYear 1903
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