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  2. Main Building, U.S. Bureau of Mines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Building,_U.S._Bureau...

    The building was designed by Henry Hornbostel, who was also responsible for several nearby buildings at Carnegie Mellon University. The university purchased the complex from the Bureau of Mines in 1985. [4] The main building, also known as Building A, was renamed Hamburg Hall and is now the headquarters of the Heinz College.

  3. Heinz College - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinz_College

    Hamburg Hall, home of the Heinz College. Heinz College is headquartered in Hamburg Hall, a building listed on the National Register of Historic Places and designed by noted Beaux-Arts architect Henry Hornbostel. Hamburg Hall is named for Lester A. Hamburg, an industrialist and philanthropist active in the Pittsburgh Jewish Community. [7]

  4. Hamburg City Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg_City_Hall

    The city hall is located in the center of Hamburg. In front of it is a market-square, the Rathausmarkt, used for events and festivals. At the rear of the town hall is the Hamburg Stock Exchange. The main shopping street, Mönckebergstraße, connects the town hall with the central station.

  5. Elbphilharmonie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elbphilharmonie

    The easternmost part of the building is rented by Westin as the Westin Hamburg Hotel that opened on 4 November 2016. [23] The hotel offers 244 rooms between the 9th and 20th floors. The lobby in the 8th floor can be accessed from the Plaza. The upper floors west of the concert hall accommodate 45 luxury apartments.

  6. Speicherstadtrathaus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speicherstadtrathaus

    The building's inauguration took place on June 1, 1904. The building was planned for the Hamburger Freihafen-Lagerhaus-Gesellschaft (HFLG), today called Hamburger Hafen und Logistik AG (HHLA), as the head office and was the successor to the headquarters building at Sandtorkai 1, which itself was inaugurated in 1887 and had since become too small.

  7. Consulate General of the United States, Hamburg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consulate_General_of_the...

    The new location of the Consulate General is at Kehrweider 8, 20257 Hamburg, in Amundsen Haus of the Hanseatic Trade Center building complex. [7] In 2007, Ms. Karen E. Johnson succeeded Duane C. Butcher as consul general in Hamburg. [8] As of 2009, 31 consuls and 22 consuls general had served in Hamburg. [3]

  8. Hanseatic Trade Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanseatic_Trade_Center

    The Hanseatic Trade Center (HTC) is a major office complex in the HafenCity of Hamburg, Germany.Developed after an urban design competition in the 1980s, and built in five phases during the 1990s, it was the first new construction in the urban renewal of this part of the Port of Hamburg.

  9. Congress Center Hamburg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congress_Center_Hamburg

    [1] [15] It is directly connected to the Radisson Blu Hotel Hamburg, which was opened in 1973 and renovated in 2009. [16] The building has a total capacity of 105,000 square metres (126,000 sq yd), has over 50 rooms, and accommodates up to 12,000 people. [4] [10] The perennial roof garden on the top of Hall H is the largest in Europe. [7]