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The INPR leased the UP Boise Branch connecting Boise, Idaho with the Union Pacific main line at Nampa as well as the Wilder branch line from Caldwell, Idaho to Wilder, Idaho starting in 1999 and continuing until 2009. However, the Boise Valley Railroad took over operation in 2009, possibly as a result of the post-housing boom recession. [7] [8]
It is the main component of the wider Boise–Mountain Home–Ontario, ID–OR Combined Statistical Area, which adds Elmore and Payette counties in Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon. It is the state's largest officially designated metropolitan area and includes Idaho's three largest cities: Boise, Nampa, and Meridian .
Boise County is a rural mountain county in the U.S. state of Idaho.As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 7,610. [1] The county seat is historic Idaho City, [2] which is connected through a series of paved and unpaved roads to Lowman, Centerville, Placerville, Pioneerville, Star Ranch, Crouch, Garden Valley, and Horseshoe Bend.
Boise native William Agee joined the company in 1964 and was the chief financial officer from 1969 to May 1972; [5] [6] the stock price rapidly rose to $77 in 1969, but was down to $15 by the fall of 1971. [7] [8] Boise Cascade's current headquarters in Boise was built in 1970, designed by architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.
Downtown Boise skyline Downtown Boise, Idaho - 2013 Main Street in Downtown Boise Downtown Boise, Idaho - 2013. The following table shows the fourteen tallest buildings in Boise, Idaho. The tallest building in Boise and the state of Idaho since 2013 is the 8th & Main Building at 18 floors and 323 feet (278 feet without the spire) in height.
The dam created Cascade Reservoir along the west side of the city. With the introduction of nearby Tamarack Resort in 2004, the name was officially changed to Lake Cascade for marketing reasons. [citation needed] Cascade was the home of a sizable Boise Cascade sawmill, which closed in May 2001. [6]