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It was founded in 1986 by The Junior League of St. Petersburg and Hands-On, Inc. Great Explorations - The Hands-On Museum was formerly housed in a warehouse type location in Downtown St. Petersburg with similar building architecture to the Salvador Dalí Museum and P. Buckley Moss Museum.
8 miles (13 km) south of St. Petersburg on Mullet Key: St. Petersburg: 26: George N. Cretekos (Sponge Diving Boat) George N. Cretekos (Sponge Diving Boat) August 3, 1990 : Tarpon Springs Sponge Docks at Dodecanese Boulevard
Looking at the Gandy Freeway overpasses at 4th Street N, St. Petersburg, FL. After being shelved for decades, largely due to a lack of funding, the Gandy Freeway section from just east of 4th Street N to the I-275 interchange was finally built at a cost of $83 million.
St. Petersburg FL Sunken Gardens Sign Butterfly Garden at Sunken Gardens. The Sunken Gardens are 4 acres (1.6 ha) of well-established botanical gardens, located in the Historic Old Northeast neighborhood of St. Petersburg, Florida, at 1825 4th Street North. The Gardens have existed for more than a century, and are one of the oldest roadside ...
The Studebaker Building (now home to the USGS St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center) is a historic site in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is located at 600 4th Street South. On July 5, 1985, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
St. Petersburg is a city in Pinellas County, Florida, United States.As of the 2020 census, the population was 258,308, making it the fifth-most populous city in Florida and the most populous city in the state that is not a county seat (the city of Clearwater is the seat of Pinellas County). [4]
This is a list of neighborhoods in St. Petersburg in Pinellas County, Florida, United States. Many of the city's neighborhoods have been renamed, redefined and changed since the city's founding in 1888. As such, the exact extents of some neighborhoods can differ from person to person.
Snell's residence on the Isle. Snell Isle is a neighborhood in St. Petersburg, Florida, United States that centers on Snell Isle Boulevard. The street is named after local developer C. Perry Snell (1869–1942), a Kentucky druggist who moved to St. Petersburg in 1900 and began buying properties he developed into upscale residential neighborhoods, commercial buildings, and public parks. [1]