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The Mayo Hotel was built in 1925, designed by architect George Winkler, and financed by John D. and Cass A. Mayo. [2] The base of two-story Doric columns supports fourteen floors marked with false terracotta balconies, and a two-story crown of stone and a dentiled cornice [3] At the time the 600-room hotel was the tallest building in Oklahoma.
Former U.S. Route 66 over the Arkansas River from Tulsa to West Tulsa 36°08′38″N 96°00′10″W / 36.143889°N 96.002778°W / 36.143889; -96.002778 ( Eleventh Street Arkansas River
Harwelden Mansion Bronze Statue Harwelden Mansion Bed and Breakfast, west view overlooking the Arkansas River. Harwelden is a historical building, also known as Harwelden Mansion, and is an English Tudor-styled mansion with Collegiate Gothic elements in Tulsa, Oklahoma that is an Event Center and Bed and Breakfast. It was built in 1923 by a ...
Downtown Tulsa is an area of approximately 1.4 square miles (3.6 km 2) surrounded by an inner-dispersal loop created by Interstate 244, US 64 and US 75. [1] The area serves as Tulsa's financial and business district; it is the focus of a large initiative to draw tourism, which includes plans to capitalize on the area's historic architecture. [2]
Cove Theater (600 seats), 2321 West 41st Street: 1947: Demolished, 1955 Fire Station #3, 1339 East 1st Street: 1948: John Wesley Robb: Demolished 1966 for I-244 Fire Station #16, 1401 North Lewis Avenue [2] 1948: John Wesley Robb: Fire Station #15, 4162 East Admiral Street [2] 1948: Hanton and Wilson: Peoria Theater (800 seats), 2541 North ...
Apache Street / Sheridan Road – Tulsa Zoo: Apache Street not signed westbound: 8.5: 13.7: Virgin Street – Airport Terminal: Virgin Street not signed eastbound: 9.1: 14.6: Memorial Drive / Pine Street: Signed for Memorial Drive eastbound, Pine Street westbound: 10.5: 16.9: I-244 / US 412 to US 169 – Joplin, Downtown SH-11 ends
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Showed first talkie in Tulsa and first 3-D movie in Tulsa. Destroyed by fire 1973. Rialto Theater, 7 W. 3rd St.(AKA-Orpheum) 1917: John Eberson (1,400 seats) This was Tulsa's second Rialto, first sat next door at 13 W. 3rd. First theater in Tulsa to have air-conditioning. Demolished 1971. Akdar Theatre, (Cimarron Ballroom), 221 W. 4th St. 1925