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110 East Washington Street is a high rise in Indianapolis, Indiana. It was completed in 1921 and has 15 floors. It is used for residential housing.
The Commercial Union Assurance Building is an 16-story office building located in San Francisco's financial district. The building, completed in 1921, stands 308 feet (94 m) tall, equaling the height of the San Francisco City Hall. Both the San Francisco City Hall and the Commercial Union Assurance Building were San Francisco's tallest building(s) until 1922. The much taller 555 California Street stands to the west of this Renaissance-revival styled building.
The DTE Energy Building is located at 2000 2nd Avenue in downtown Detroit, Michigan, between Beech Street and West Elizabeth Street. It was constructed in 1921, and stands at nine stories in height. The building is used primarily for offices, and was designed in the renaissance revival arechitectural style. It is a part of the DTE Energy Headquarters complex of buildings. it also stands next to the Detroit Edison Company Service Building.
Hibernia Bank Building, located at 812 Gravier Street, in the Central Business District of New Orleans, Louisiana, is a 20-story, 355 feet (108 m)-tall skyscraper. It used to be the headquarters of Hibernia National Bank. At the time it was completed, it was the tallest building in the state of Louisiana.
Regents Park is a 1,026 unit, upscale apartment complex in the Indian Village section of the Kenwood community area of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States, and adjacent to the Hyde Park community area border. Bordering Harold Washington Park, its two parallel towers are just west of Lake Shore Drive, Burnham Park and Lake Michigan with clear park and lake views to the east and south.
The Wrigley Building (400-410 North Michigan Avenue, Near North Side, Chicago, Illinois) is a skyscraper located directly across Michigan Avenue from the Tribune Tower on the Magnificent Mile. It was built to house the corporate headquarters of the Wrigley Company. When ground was broken for the Wrigley Building in 1920, there were no major office buildings north of the Chicago River and the Michigan Avenue Bridge, which spans the river just south of the building was still under construction.
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