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For a list of companies based within Dallas city limits, go to List of companies in Dallas. The Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex is home to over 20 corporate headquarters, making the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex one of the largest corporate headquarters concentration in the United States.
The Titche–Goettinger Building is one of Dallas' original broad-front department stores located along St. Paul Street between Main and Elm Street in downtown Dallas, Texas . The structure currently houses apartments, retail space, and the Universities Center at Dallas.
The Santa Fe Terminal Complex is an 18-acre (73,000 m 2) complex of historic buildings in the Government District of downtown Dallas, Texas ().Constructed in 1924 as the headquarters for the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway and the Southwest's largest merchandising center, three of the original four buildings remain today and have been renovated into various uses.
The Yvonne A. Ewell Townview Magnet Center (TMC) is a magnet school in East Oak Cliff, Dallas, Texas, United States. The school names reflects the view of downtown Dallas. [2] TMC is a three-story building campus that houses six independent magnet high schools in the Dallas Independent School District. The six component schools are:
The Neiman Marcus Building is a historic commercial structure located in the Main Street District in downtown Dallas, Texas . It is the corporate headquarters and flagship store of Neiman Marcus . It is the last of the original department stores still serving downtown Dallas.
Bank of America Plaza is a 72-story, 280.7 m (921 ft) late-modernist skyscraper located in the Main Street District in the city's downtown core in Dallas, Texas, United States. It is the tallest skyscraper in the city, the 3rd tallest in Texas and the 45th tallest in the United States.
Casa Linda Plaza, its official name, [1] was the brainchild of Carl Martin Brown and his son Howard D. Brown. The East Dallas family farm land of 600 plus acres was purchased in 1937.
Busch purchased Dallas's old City Hall on June 22, 1910, [3] demolished it, and constructed the new hotel at a cost of $1.8 million. The name was announced as the New Oriental Hotel. [4] It was designed by Thomas P. Barnett of Barnett, Haynes & Barnett of St. Louis in the Beaux Arts style.