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55 West, commonly referenced as, simply, 55 W, is an apartment tower in Downtown Orlando. The building overlooks Church Street Station , and stands next to 200 South Orange . Built in 2009, the building is the fifth-tallest building in downtown
1994: Church Street Station completes major expansion with a 24,000-square-foot (2,200 m 2) Presidential Ballroom [30] [19] for $5.5 million. 1998: Church Street Station loses $1M on revenue of $20.85M, attracts only 550,000 visitors. [37] 1999: Baltimore Gas & Electric sells Church Street Station to Enic PLC, a British firm, for $11.5M. [38]
Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church established. [4] 1884 - Orange County Jail built. [5] 1886 Orlando Black (school) opens. [4] Orlando Street Railway begins operating (approximate date). English Club formed. [3] 1889 - Church Street Station built. [6] 1891 - St. James Cathedral built. [7] 1892 Courthouse built. [3] Lake Eola Park established.
The Edge (Church Street Plaza Tower 2) 400 (122) 32 2024 Part of the two tower development known as Church Street Plaza. The first tower was completed in mid 2019. Tower 2 is expected to break ground soon. It will be a mix of office and residential. Society Phase 2 — 17 Residential. Orlando Magic Entertainment Complex Tower 1 — 25 Hotel
Bounded by West Church Street, South Division Avenue, Long Street, McFall Avenue, and South Parramore Avenue 28°32′18″N 81°23′13″W / 28.538322°N 81.386917°W / 28.538322; -81.386917 ( Holden-Parramore Historic
Orlando (/ ɔːr ˈ l æ n d oʊ / ⓘ or-LAN-doh) is a city in and the county seat of Orange County, Florida, United States.The city proper had a population of 307,573 at the 2020 census, making it the fourth-most populous city in Florida behind Jacksonville, Miami, and Tampa and the state's most populous inland city. [4]
Pages in category "History of Orlando, Florida" ... St. George Antiochian Orthodox Church (Orlando, Florida) ... Orlando Street Railway; Orlando Utilities Commission ...
SunRail was constructed along the CSX A-Line, a rail corridor which was constructed in 1880 by the South Florida Railroad.Of the four stations in Orlando proper, Florida Hospital Health Village was the only station built from scratch: Church Street and Orlando Health/Amtrak were built at former Atlantic Coast Line Railroad stations, and LYNX Central was built at an existing bus station.