Belmonte Flats

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

The Belmonte Flats are two connected apartment buildings at the intersection of 43rd Street and King Drive in the Grand Boulevard community area of Chicago, Illinois. The older and taller of the two buildings was built in 1893, while the other building opened in 1896. The Grand Boulevard area was popular with affluent Chicagoans at the time, and apartments like the Belmonte Flats served as luxury apartment housing for these residents. Chicago architecture firm Patton & Fisher designed the apartments; both buildings have matching Chicago school designs with Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque elements. The buildings both feature brick exteriors with limestone bases and terra cotta cornices, and the taller building has a turret at its corner. The interior features extensive detailing typ rdf:langString
rdf:langString Belmonte Flats
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Belmonte Flats
rdf:langString Belmonte Flats
xsd:float 41.81694412231445
xsd:float -87.61638641357422
xsd:integer 62050468
xsd:integer 1069258201
xsd:date 1998-02-05
rdf:langString Patton and Fisher
rdf:langString Chicago School, Queen Anne, Richardsonian Romanesque
rdf:langString less than one acre
xsd:integer 4257
rdf:langString Chicago#Illinois#USA
xsd:integer 98000063
xsd:string 41.816944444444445 -87.61638888888889
rdf:langString The Belmonte Flats are two connected apartment buildings at the intersection of 43rd Street and King Drive in the Grand Boulevard community area of Chicago, Illinois. The older and taller of the two buildings was built in 1893, while the other building opened in 1896. The Grand Boulevard area was popular with affluent Chicagoans at the time, and apartments like the Belmonte Flats served as luxury apartment housing for these residents. Chicago architecture firm Patton & Fisher designed the apartments; both buildings have matching Chicago school designs with Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque elements. The buildings both feature brick exteriors with limestone bases and terra cotta cornices, and the taller building has a turret at its corner. The interior features extensive detailing typical of luxury housing, including ornamental moldings and brackets and a mosaic tile floor in the lobby. The buildings were added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 5, 1998.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2708
xsd:string 98000063
xsd:gYear 1893
<Geometry> POINT(-87.616386413574 41.816944122314)

data from the linked data cloud