Divine Lorraine Hotel
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Divine_Lorraine_Hotel an entity of type: Thing
The Divine Lorraine Hotel, also known as the Lorraine Apartments, stands at the corner of Broad Street and Fairmount Avenue in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Designed by architect Willis G. Hale and built between 1892 and 1894, the building originally functioned as apartments, housing some of Philadelphia's wealthy residents. Lorraine Apartments was one of the most luxurious and best preserved late 19th-century apartment houses in Philadelphia. In 1900 the building became the Lorraine Hotel when the Metropolitan Hotel Company purchased the apartments. Later it would become the first hotel in Philadelphia to be racially integrated under Father Divine.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Divine Lorraine Hotel
rdf:langString
Lorraine Apartments
rdf:langString
Lorraine Apartments
xsd:float
39.96666717529297
xsd:float
-75.16000366210938
xsd:integer
8155785
xsd:integer
1118190204
xsd:date
2002-11-27
rdf:langString
right
rdf:langString
George F. Payne and Company
rdf:langString
Late Victorian
xsd:integer
1892
rdf:langString
The Divine Lorraine from Broad Street, before renovations
xsd:integer
699
xsd:integer
2001427
rdf:langString
Historic Divine Lorraine Hotel in Philadelphia, PA, Wanda Kaluza, 2:26, August 2011.
rdf:langString
Divine Lorraine, Antiquity Echos, 4:20, October 2011.
xsd:integer
210
xsd:integer
210
xsd:string
39.96666666666667 -75.16
rdf:langString
The Divine Lorraine and development on North Broad, Radio Times With Marty Moss-Coane, 49:03, November 2012
rdf:langString
The Divine Lorraine Hotel, also known as the Lorraine Apartments, stands at the corner of Broad Street and Fairmount Avenue in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Designed by architect Willis G. Hale and built between 1892 and 1894, the building originally functioned as apartments, housing some of Philadelphia's wealthy residents. Lorraine Apartments was one of the most luxurious and best preserved late 19th-century apartment houses in Philadelphia. In 1900 the building became the Lorraine Hotel when the Metropolitan Hotel Company purchased the apartments. Later it would become the first hotel in Philadelphia to be racially integrated under Father Divine. The hotel was abandoned and deteriorated, with graffiti all over the walls, broken windows, and crumbling stone. On September 16, 2015, a massive renovation project began.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
12747
xsd:string
02001427
xsd:gYear
1892
<Geometry>
POINT(-75.160003662109 39.966667175293)