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The Renaissance Cincinnati Downtown Hotel (previously known as the Bartlett Building and the Union Trust Building) is a historic building in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, located at 4th & Walnut Street. The 19-story tower was the tallest building in the state for 3 years until completion of the Fourth & Walnut Center .
250 East 5th Street The 36th-tallest building in Ohio. Former headquarters of Chiquita. 10 PNC Center: 354 (108) 27 1979 201 East 5th Street Tallest building built in Cincinnati in the 1970s. 11 Atrium Two: 351 (107) 28 1984 221 East 4th Street US Bank Tower (Cincinnati) 351 (107) 26 1981 425 Walnut Street 13 36 East Seventh 322 (99) 26 1989
Dixie Terminal North Building - Fourth and Walnut Streets. The Dixie Terminal is a set of buildings in Cincinnati, Ohio, that were completed in 1921 and served as a streetcar terminal, stock exchange, and office building in the city's downtown business district. They were designed by Cincinnati architect Frederick W. Garber's Garber & Woodward ...
The firm subsequently proposed transforming the tower into a 349-room hotel, but was unable to fund the $67 million project. In 2024, the Cincinnati City Council approved a revised plan by Newcrest Image subsidiary Supreme Bright Cincinnati LLC to convert the "mostly vacant" Fourth & Walnut Center into a mixed-use building. Scheduled for ...
The Scripps Center is a high-rise office building located at 312 Walnut Street at the corner of 3rd Street in the Central Business District of Cincinnati, Ohio. [3] At the height of 468.01 feet (142.65 m), with 35 stories, it is the fourth tallest building in the city, and the tallest added between the building of the Carew Tower in 1931 and the opening of the Great American Tower at Queen ...
The 4th & Vine Tower (formerly known as the Union Central Tower [6] and Central Trust Bank Building) is a 151 m (495 ft) skyscraper in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio. It stands 31 stories tall, overlooking the Ohio River waterfront.
650 Walnut Street Cincinnati, Ohio United States: Coordinates: Owner: Cincinnati Arts Association [2] Type: Fine arts performing center: Capacity: 2,719 (Procter & Gamble Hall) 437 (Jarson-Kaplan Theater) 150 (Fifth Third Bank Theater) 3,306 (total) Construction; Opened: 1995: Years active
In 2002, following Firstar's merger with U.S. Bank, the arena took on the name U.S. Bank Arena and kept that name until 2019. The arena seats 17,556 people and is the largest indoor arena in the Greater Cincinnati region with 346,100 square feet (32,150 m 2 ) of space.