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Cary Street Park and Shop Center, also known as the Cary Court Shopping Center, is a historic shopping center developed by the C.F. Sauer family [3] in the Carytown district of Richmond, Virginia. It was built in 1938 in the Art Deco style. Two rectangular wings to the west and east were completed in 1949 and 1951.
Carytown, seen from West Cary Street, with the Byrd Theatre on the right. Carytown is an urban retail district in Richmond, Virginia; it is along Cary Street at the southern end of the Museum District. Located west of the historic Fan District, Carytown has an eclectic flavor and includes more than 230 shops, restaurants, and offices. [1]
Roughly along E. Carey St. between S. 14th and S. 12th Sts.; also roughly bounded by the former Seaboard Coast Line railroad tracks, the Downtown Expressway, Main, Dock, and 12th Sts.; also 11-15 and 101 S. 15th St., and 1433 E. Main St.; also the 300 block of S. 11th, 1200 and 1300 E. Byrd Sts., 1201 Haxall Pt., and the Thirteenth Street Bridge
Tuckahoe Apartments, also known as The Tuckahoe, is a historic apartment building in Richmond, Virginia.It was designed by W. Duncan Lee and built in 1928–1929. It is a massive, six-story, red brick, Georgian Revival style building.
The house, which is 7,000 square feet, is located on Cary Street in the Wilton neighborhood, near the Carytown district. [1] The mansion was the childhood home of socialites Dabney Mercer and Tinsley Mortimer. [2] [3] In the 1990s the home was the source of a feud between two prominent Richmond families, the Mercers and the Gottwalds.
Downtown Cary Park will be open from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. each day of the week. ... Facing Academy Street are the children’s play areas, including The Nest, a splash pad, slides and an area for ...
Here’s a glimpse inside Cary’s newest 60-year-old building. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us. Mail ...
In 1929, Ampthill House, the manor house of Ampthill Plantation, was dismantled, moved to a site on Cary Street Road in the West End of Richmond, and reassembled where it sits today. Although it is not open to the public, Ampthill House is a noteworthy local landmark, and is marked by a Virginia Historical Marker. [4]