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  2. Whitehall Terrace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitehall_Terrace

    Whitehall Terrace was commissioned in the 1920s by businessman Richard H. Wright II. [1] [2] The son of Thomas Davenport Wright and Elizabeth Wright, a socialite who founded the Debutante Cotillion and Christmas Ball of Durham, he was the president of the Wright Real Estate Company.

  3. Hill Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_Building

    Greenfire Real Estate Holdings, which bought the Hill Building in 2006, successfully renovated the building into a 165-room luxury hotel. The city of Durham voted to add $4.2 million after a September 20, 2010 public hearing regarding this plan, and Durham County voted to add $1 million.

  4. Mary Duke Biddle Estate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Duke_Biddle_Estate

    Mary Duke Biddle Estate, also known as the James O. Cobb House, is a historic home and estate located at Durham, Durham County, North Carolina.The main house "Pinecrest" is a Tudor Revival style dwelling built in 1927, with additions and interior renovations made between 1935 and 1958.

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  6. List of tallest buildings in North Carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_buildings...

    Rank Name Image Height ft / m Floors Year City Notes 1 Bank of America Corporate Center: 871 / 265 [1]: 60 1992 Charlotte: 56th-tallest in the United States and the tallest between Philadelphia and Atlanta; tallest building in Charlotte and North Carolina since 1992 [2] However, it is the 2nd largest building in Charlotte by leasable square feet, the first is 550 South Tryon.

  7. Benjamin N. Duke House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_N._Duke_House

    Mary Lillian Duke bought an estate in Durham, North Carolina, in 1935 and began spending increasing amounts of time there. By 1950, she lived in Durham for six months of the year, splitting her remaining time between 1009 Fifth Avenue and another estate in Florida. [48] The facade was repainted gray in the 1950s. [17]