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Priatek Plaza, formerly known as One Progress Plaza and the Bank of America Tower, [4] is a 28-story skyscraper designed by Jung Brannen Associates located at 200 Central Avenue in downtown St. Petersburg, Florida. It was completed in 1990, and at 117.65 m (386.0 ft), it is one of the tallest buildings in the city, and has the largest tenant ...
One St. Petersburg is a 41-story high rise condominium located in the city of St. Petersburg, Florida, United States. Standing 450 feet (140 m) tall, it is the tallest building in St. Petersburg and Pinellas County. [3] The high rise contains 253 condominium rooms that range from 1,400 to 2,500 square feet.
Tallest building in St. Petersburg, Florida from 1990 to 2018. [15] Tallest building in Pinellas County, from 1990 to 2018. [16] Originally known as One Progress Plaza and the Bank of America Tower. [17] Tallest building in St. Petersburg built in the 1990s. 6 Signature Place: 381 (116) [18] 36: 2009 Tallest residential building in St ...
St. Petersburg is a city in Pinellas County, Florida, United States.As of the 2020 census, the population was 258,308, making it the fifth-most populous city in Florida and the most populous city in the state that is not a county seat (the city of Clearwater is the seat of Pinellas County). [4]
Webb's City was a one-stop department store that was located in St. Petersburg, Florida. Founded in 1926, it claimed to be "the World's Most Unusual Drug Store;" founder James Earl "Doc" Webb has been described as "the P. T. Barnum of specialty store retailing". [1] Sideshows included animal tricks, acrobats, and talking mermaids.
The station was constructed in 1926 by the Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad, the second railway line to enter St. Petersburg and an affiliate of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad (SAL). The office building and warehouse are built of brick in masonry vernacular style and are the city's only substantially unaltered example of railroad architecture. [ 3 ]
On May 3, 2016, the Times Publishing Company announced the purchase of the Times' competing newspaper, The Tampa Tribune, from Revolution Capital Group, saying it intends to create one financially secure, locally owned daily newspaper in the Tampa Bay region. [13] The Times ended publication of the Tribune on that day.
At the time, Burdines operated a store at the Crossroads shopping center across the street from Tyrone Square. [9] In the wake of the merger, Burdines closed its store at Crossroads (which later became a Montgomery Wards ) on September 28, 1991 and consolidated its operation with Maas Brothers at Tyrone Square. [ 10 ]