| 280 Plaza was completed in 1981 and is an 18-story, 319,596 sq. ft. building featuring a granite and marble lobby. |
303 Broadway at Queen City Square is a 16-story office tower in downtown Cincinnati, containing offices and a concealed parking structure. It was constructed as Phase I of the Queen City Square development. |
The 500's on the Main is a mixed-use development anchoring the western half of downtown Lexington. It is located adjacent to Victorian Square and is across the street from the Lexington Center and Rupp Arena. |
Completed in 1993, the 12-story 77-unit Adam's Place Condominiums overlooks the Ohio River and the Interstate 471 bridge, and is adjacent to downtown Cincinnati, Mt. Adams and the East End. |
Constructed in 1983 for the American Gas and Electric Company at a cost of $106 million, this 31-story skyscraper in downtown Columbus, Ohio stands at 456 feet and has excellent vantage points along the Scioto River. |
Opened in 1962, the Albert B. Chandler Hospital along Rose Street at the University of Kentucky in Lexington, Kentucky is a component of the University of Kentucky Hospital encompassed within the Chandler Medical Center. Design work for a new hospital began in August 2005 due to patient increases that placed an undue burden on the existing, aging facilities, and a need to modernize the hospital due to the "rapidly changing nature of health care delivery" and other advances. |
| The temporary title Angliana Avenue Mixed Use Development is a proposed mixed-use project for Angliana Avenue in Lexington, Kentucky that would include a cinema, a bowling alley, restaurants, retail storefronts, a grocery store and 150 apartments. |
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The Artek Lofts mixed-use development is located on Old Georgetown Street just west of downtown. Consisting of numerous loft condominiums, an art gallery, and commercial space, it is a key component of the Western Suburb Historic District. |
The Atlas Building is a 12-story mid-rise along East High Street in downtown Columbus. Designed by architect Frank Packard and constructed in 1905, the corner building was designed to hold 3,000 employees for Columbus Savings and Trust. |
The Atrium Tower complex comprises of two individual mid-rises in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio along East 4th Street. |
Constructed in 1956, the Beacon Building at 50 W. Gay Street houses several city of Columbus functions, such as the Department of Development and the Public Safety Department. |
| The Ben Ali Apartments was a proposed 12-story senior citizens apartment building at corner of 119 Main Street and Limestone in Lexington, Kentucky. It would have been constructed above the existing four level Ben Ali parking structure. |
The Biological Pharmaceutical Complex Building, or BPCB, is a five-story building at the University of Kentucky adjacent to the Biomedical Biological Science Research Building. The $79.9 million building will allow the College of Pharmacy to relocate from its current position along Rose Street. |
The Biomedical Biological Science Research Building (BBSRB) is a five-story research facility for the University of Kentucky. It is located at the corner of Virginia Avenue and South Limestone. |
| This proposed upscale development along Mill Street would offer units ranging from $500,000 to $1.9 million. Carriage houses and first-floor retail would compliment the development, only blocks way from historic Gratz Park. |
The Borden Building was constructed in 1974 in Columbus, Ohio and served as headquarters for Borden Incorporated after relocating from New York City. The tower was topped out on May 9, 1973. |
Boyd County's first courthouse, constructed in 1909, was the first court facility in Kentucky to be equipped with air conditioning. It was replaced with a larger facility in 1932 and expanded in 1982. A new judicial center was constructed across the street, opening on July 17. |
| Broadway Commons was a proposed mixed-use development bounded by Broadway to the west and Reading Road to the north on the northeast fringe of downtown Cincinnati. |
| The Capital Plaza complex in Frankfort, Kentucky extends along Wilkinson Boulevard, and contains numerous government support facilities, a hotel, federal government structure, and convention center. |
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Captain's Watch is a four-story, 40-unit condominium tower at 903 Adams Crossing and at the base of Mount Adams. |
CenterCourt is a mixed-use development along South Upper at Avenue of Champions and Bolivar Street in Lexington, Kentucky within the College Town district. It is one block from the University of Kentucky and several blocks from Rupp Arena and downtown. |
| The Central Utility Plant is a facility designed to provide electrical distribution and hot and chilled water to the Xavier University campus. |
Centrepointe is a $250 million, 823,000 sq. ft. 35-story high-rise tower under construction in downtown Lexington, Kentucky. |
The Charles T. Wethington, Jr. Building is a 210,300 sq. ft. six-story brick and concrete structure for the University of Kentucky housing laboratories and classrooms. |
The Chase bank tower is a 14-story tower along East Main Street. |
Chemed Center was constructed at the corner of East 5th and Sycamore Street in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio in 1991. |
| Chevy Plaza and Chevy Chase Center was a proposed two-building, nine-story residential and commercial development in Lexington, Kentucky. It would have been located at East High Street and Euclid Avenue and at East High Street and South Ashland Avenue. |
The Christ Church Apartments is a 13-floor tower dedicated to senior citizens. |
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CityCourts is a residential condominium project in the "College Town" district, only one block from the University of Kentucky and downtown. |
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The Conaton Learning Commons is a five-level academic structure being constructed within the Hoff Academic Quad at Xavier University. |
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The CRMS Building is home to the University of Kentucky Center for Manufacturing. |
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| Proposed as a 126-unit mixed-use project in the Bell Court neighborhood just east of downtown, the development has received its initial nod of approval although no work has begun. |
Located on the southern edge of Over-the-Rhine at 100 East Central Parkway, the Emery Center Apartments contain 62 units. The building, including the adjoining Emery Theatre, is owned by the University of Cincinnati but is leased long-term to the Emery Center Corporation, a non-profit group comprised of arts, historic preservation and downtown development advocates, and the Kroger Company, which invested in the restoration of the property. |
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Completed in 1914 by the famous New York firm of McKim, Mead and White, the Fayette National Bank building features 15 floors and was the Lexington's tallest structure for almost 60 years. |
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| The 10-story Franklin County Hall of Justice at the corner of South High and West Mound streets in downtown Columbus, Ohio. |
| The Franklin County Judicial Center is a proposed three-story, $30 million judicial complex in Frankfort, Kentucky. |
| Located on the eastern fringe of Marshall University's central campus, the still-unnamed Freshmen North and Freshmen South dormitories are located at the corner of 5th Avenue and 20th Street, adjacent to the Student Recreation Center. |
| GameDay Center was a planned 15-story residential condominium at the corner of Broadway and West High Street in Lexington, Kentucky. |
The Gill Heart Institute, short for the Linda and Jack Gill Heart Institute is a building at the University of Kentucky within the Chandler Medical Center along Rose Street. The five-level structure houses clinics, diagnostic areas, six Cath and EP laboratories with associated support services and numerous administrative and faculty offices. |
Constructed in 1911 as an 135-seat vaudeville house on St. Clair Street in downtown Frankfort, Kentucky, the Grand Theatre has been restored into a multipurpose visual and performing arts center. |
| The Guardian Building, located in the block of Griswold, West Congress and West Larned streets in downtown Detroit, Michigan, was first proposed by the Union Trust Company in the 1928. |
| Constructed in 1904 for a plumbing and heating supply company, the Hale-Justis Building resides along Over-the-Rhine's southern border at Central Parkway. Today, it contains 30 residential condominiums. |
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Constructed in 1924, the High-Long Building is located at 5 East Long Street in Columbus, Ohio. |
Constructed in 1984 at a cost of $100 million, the Huntington Center is located at South High Street and Capitol Square in downtown Columbus, Ohio. |
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| Proposed for the corner of East Main Street and Kentucky Avenue in Lexington, Justice Lofts would contain upscale 12, 3,600 square-foot condominiums spread amongst six floors. |
The Kentucky State Capitol is the permanent seat of government in Frankfort, and was constructed in the neoclassical Beaux Arts style. |
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| A collection of five century-old houses along South Limestone, Kimball House Square is a 36-unit mixed-use development that in the past, has been home to residences, a boarding house, sorority house, and a hotel. |
| The Kincaid Towers is a 22-floor high-rise, located along Vine Street between Broadway and Mill Street. Its exterior is polished buff concrete with blue tinted glass, with terraces on the 5th, 10th, 14th, and 21st floor.[1] |
| Once one of Lexington's most prominent hotels, it is now home to the Urban County Government. It was last renovated in 1984. |
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| Once the flagship department store for Lazarus, the building is being restored for office and retail use. |
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| The Lexington Center is located on a 11-acre site in Lexington, Kentucky. It features a convention center, a shopping mall, the Hyatt Regency Hotel, and Rupp Arena. It opened in 1976. |
| This eight-story structure was completed in 1927. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. |
| This triangular, iconic structure along Midland was once home to a whole-wheat facility, coffin company, the Nehi Bottling company and Allender & Brown Moving and Storage Co. It is now a center for homeowners and contractors that are building or renovating a house, and features numerous galleries, consultants, and shops. |
| The Lexington Financial Center, locally known as "The Big Blue Building," is Lexington's tallest structure at over 400 feet. |
| Lorillard Lofts, a former tobacco processing plant, closing in 2001. Located west of downtown, the plant has been restored into 43 loft condominiums. |
| This development is a 96-unit loft condominium and retail project in the heart of downtown Lexington. The large project is an excellent anchor for the eastern downtown market and has begun to revitalize the surrounding district. |
| Main Building is a four-story administration and classroom building for the University of Kentucky. It houses some administrative offices for the University, the President's office, numerous conference rooms, several classrooms, and a visitors center. |
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The Metropole is located at 609 Walnut Street in downtown Cincinnati's Backstage entertainment district. Constructed as a luxury hotel in 1912, the ten-story structure was converted into apartments for low-income residents in 1971. |
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| The National City Bank Tower is a 13-story bank tower anchoring the eastern half of downtown at East Main and Rose streets. |
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| The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center along Second Street opened in August 2004. |
| This 17-unit development just west of Rupp Arena is being constructed with sustainability and the environment in mind. Following the EarthCraft principles, it has been described as "unapologetically green." |
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| This 26-unit part-rehabilitation and part-new construction project at Short and Martin Luther King aims at bringing affordable and upscale living to downtown Lexington. |
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| Park Plaza Apartments is a 202 unit, 21 story residential high-rise in downtown Lexington. |
| The Ralph G. Anderson Building was completed in 2002 and is home to the Department of Mechanical Engineering. |
| The PNC Bank Plaza, a mid-rise, is located along Vine Street between Upper and Limestone. |
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| Located at the corner of East 8th and Sycamore Street in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, the Power Building today is known as the Renaissance Apartments at the Power Building. |
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Queen City Square is a high-rise development project under construction in downtown Cincinnati. The high-rise was first proposed in the late 1980s, however, the project was shelved until 2002. Upon resurfacing, Queen City Square was proposed as a 37-story tower to be constructed after work concluded at 303 Broadway. After several modifications, the height was increased so that it eclipsed the Carew Tower as Cincinnati's tallest structure. |
| The Ralph G. Anderson Building was completed in 2002 and is home to the Department of Mechanical Engineering. |
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| The Renaissance Center is a collection of seven interconnected skyscrapers situated on 14 acres along the Detroit River in Detroit, Michigan. Located on the International Riverfront, the complex is owned by General Motors and is used as its world headquarters. |
| Formerly known as the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Warehouse, the three buildings that comprise the Reynolds Building complex were constructed in 1917. The University of Kentucky has owned and used the complex for the Fine Arts program and for storage in recent decades. |
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Occupying the site of a disused tobacco warehouse, South Hill Crossing is adjacent to historic South Hill, provides numerous townhouses and apartments within walking distance to the University of Kentucky and downtown. |
A collection of 59 loft condominiums, South Hill Station Lofts is housed in a former tobacco processing plant, located adjacent to the University of Kentucky and only blocks from downtown and Rupp Arena. |
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The eleven-story State Office Building was constructed in 1938 on what was the Kentucky State Penitentiary in Frankfort, Kentucky. |
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The Student Health Facility at the University of Kentucky lies adjacent to the Charles T. Wethington, Jr. Building along South Limestone in Lexington, Kentucky. |
| Marshall University's Student Recreation Center is located on the eastern fringe of central campus at the corner of 5th Avenue and 20th Street. |
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| The Galleria was a proposed skyscraper and mall during the early 1980s in Lexington, Kentucky bounded by Upper, Main, South Mill and Vine Streets. |
Proposed as Shelbourne Plaza, an "urban village" for South Broadway, this mixed-use development was tabled due to high construction costs. It has since been rechristened as The Lex, a new mixed-use development, and construction is underway. |
The Mark is a four-story loft apartment and retail structure in the Chevy Chase neighborhood in Lexington, Kentucky. |
| The Woodlands, located at 408 East Main Street, is a nine-story residential condominium complex. |
| Three Nationwide Plaza is a 27-floor skyscraper located at the junction of North Front and West Hickory streets in downtown Columbus, Ohio. |
The Times-Star Building is located at 800 Broadway Street in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio. Constructed in 1931, the 16-story building features an Art Deco style. It was located on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. |
The Lexington Transit Center is a one-story public transportation facility with an underground parking garage along Vine Street east of South Limestone. It features numerous bus stalls and several indoor waiting rooms, with buses running every 30 minutes for much of the day. Completion of the transit center occurred in 1990 and was completed in conjunction with the Harrison Avenue (now Martin Luther King Drive) viaduct reconstruction. |
The Triangle Center is primarily an office complex with several restaurants and a coffee shop in downtown. Originally envisioned as a shopping and dining complex bound by Broadway, East Main and South Mill Streets, it was constructed by the Webb Cos. It was to compliment adjacent Victorian Square which had opened only one year prior. |
| First proposed in 2006, Trinity Flats was a proposed 21 building mixed-use development that would contain residential, commercial, and retail space at Midland Avenue and Eastern Avenue. |
| Twain's Point is a 26-unit townhome complex at 1400 Riverside Drive in Cincinnati, Ohio, and is part of the 30-acre Adam's Landing development. |
A collection of 86 loft apartments in the former Leggitt & Meyers tobacco processing plant on Boilvar, University Lofts is only one block from the University of Kentucky and three from Rupp Arena. |
The Vernon Manor, constructed in 1924 and modeled after the Hatfield House in Hertfordshire, England, was one of the premier hotels in Cincinnati, Ohio. Located on one of Cincinnati's famous Seven Hills, the Manor offered an escape from the bustling downtown and riverfront and had a reputation for being "the place to stay" for musicians visiting or performing in the city. |
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Constructed in the early 1930s, Wellington Arms is a four-level residential building along East Main features distinctive English Tudor-style facade and leaded glass windows. |
West Vine Place is a 63,000 sq. ft. nine-story office structure at West Vine Street near the corner of South Limestone in downtown Lexington. |
| The William Green Building is located at the apex of North Front, North High and West Spring streets in downtown Columbus, Ohio, and is a 33-story skyscraper hosting the Bureau of Workers Compensation. |
The William Howard Taft Center is located at the corner of East 9th and Sycamore Street in Cincinnati, Ohio. The 13-floor commercial structure was constructed in 1924. |
The William T. Young Library, located on the campus of the University of Kentucky in Lexington, Kentucky, is named for William T. Young, a prominent local businessman, horse breeder, philanthropist and alumnus of the university, who began fund raising efforts with a donation of $5 million. The facility serves as a central library for the university's social sciences, humanities and life sciences collections and acts as a federal depository and a public library for the state of Kentucky. It holds the record amongst public universities in the nation for the largest book endowment. |
The new Williams College of Business is a four-level state-of-the-art classroom and support facility being constructed within the Xavier University Hoff Academic Quad. |
| The World Coal Center was a proposed skyscraper in Lexington where the Phoenix Hotel had once stood at South Limestone, East Main Street and East Vine Street. |
The World Trade Center is a skyscraper in downtown Lexington, Kentucky bordered by South Mill, Vine and East Main Streets. Originally named the Vine Center, it was constructed by the Webb Cos. |
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