Idaho Building (Boise, Idaho)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Idaho_Building_(Boise,_Idaho) an entity of type: Thing

The Idaho Building in Boise, Idaho, is a 6-story, Second Renaissance Revival commercial structure designed by Chicago architect, . (The National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination Form lists Tourtellotte and Hummel as building designers, but "Tourtellotte may have been only a supervising architect... ) Constructed for Boise City real estate developer Walter E. Pierce in 1910–11, the building represented local aspirations that Boise City would become another Chicago. The facade features brick pilasters above a ground floor stone base, separated by seven bays with large plate glass windows in each bay. Terracotta separates the floors, with ornamentation at the sixth floor below a denticulated cornice of galvanized iron. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Idaho Building (Boise, Idaho)
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Idaho Building
rdf:langString Idaho Building
xsd:float 43.616943359375
xsd:float -116.2008361816406
xsd:integer 58882197
xsd:integer 1105962049
xsd:date 1978-12-08
rdf:langString Tourtellotte & Co.
rdf:langString Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Second Renaissance Revival
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString H. Ellenberger
xsd:integer 1910
rdf:langString The Idaho Building in 2018
rdf:langString Bannock and 8th Sts., Boise, Idaho
rdf:langString Idaho#USA
xsd:integer 78001033
xsd:string 43.61694444444444 -116.20083333333334
rdf:langString The Idaho Building in Boise, Idaho, is a 6-story, Second Renaissance Revival commercial structure designed by Chicago architect, . (The National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination Form lists Tourtellotte and Hummel as building designers, but "Tourtellotte may have been only a supervising architect... ) Constructed for Boise City real estate developer Walter E. Pierce in 1910–11, the building represented local aspirations that Boise City would become another Chicago. The facade features brick pilasters above a ground floor stone base, separated by seven bays with large plate glass windows in each bay. Terracotta separates the floors, with ornamentation at the sixth floor below a denticulated cornice of galvanized iron. The building replaced Thompson's Livery barn at 8th and Bannock Streets. The Chicago firm of H. Ellenberger was responsible for construction, and the Idaho Statesman said of the building in 1911, "The architectural scheme is one of extreme simplicity, and the builder has given his work the appearance of massive solidity." The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places December 8, 1978.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7944
xsd:string 78001033
xsd:gYear 1910
<Geometry> POINT(-116.20083618164 43.616943359375)

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