Rector Hotel

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

The Rector Hotel, later known as the St. Charles Hotel and during the 1930s the Governor Hotel, is a historic hotel building located at the Southwest corner of Third Avenue and Cherry Street in downtown Seattle, Washington. It was constructed in the latter half of 1911 by the estate of pioneer lumber baron Amos Brown. Designed by prominent Seattle architect John Graham, Sr., the original plans were for a twelve-story building that would be built in two phases but the top 6 floors were never added. Originally a hotel serving the tourist trade, by the 1970s it was operating as a Single resident occupancy hotel. In 1986 it was renovated into low-income housing by the Plymouth Housing Group. In 2002 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Rector Hotel
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Rector Hotel
rdf:langString Rector Hotel
xsd:float 47.60333251953125
xsd:float -122.3308334350586
xsd:integer 66665447
xsd:integer 1109203123
xsd:date 2002-08-09
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString Harry Brandt
xsd:integer 1911
rdf:langString Rector Hotel in 2007, with Lyon Building to the left
xsd:integer 619
rdf:langString Seattle WA Downtown
xsd:integer 2000863
xsd:string 47.60333333333333 -122.33083333333333
rdf:langString The Rector Hotel, later known as the St. Charles Hotel and during the 1930s the Governor Hotel, is a historic hotel building located at the Southwest corner of Third Avenue and Cherry Street in downtown Seattle, Washington. It was constructed in the latter half of 1911 by the estate of pioneer lumber baron Amos Brown. Designed by prominent Seattle architect John Graham, Sr., the original plans were for a twelve-story building that would be built in two phases but the top 6 floors were never added. Originally a hotel serving the tourist trade, by the 1970s it was operating as a Single resident occupancy hotel. In 1986 it was renovated into low-income housing by the Plymouth Housing Group. In 2002 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. It is located north of historic Pioneer Square, "in the shadow of" the Smith Tower, and adjacent to the former Grand Opera House and the 1910-built Chicago School-style Lyon Building, also designed by John Graham.
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xsd:string 02000863
xsd:gYear 1911
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