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Close-up view of the Golden Dome atop of the University of Notre Dame's Administration Building. Basilica steeple also in view

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Close-up view of the Golden Dome atop of the University of Notre Dame's Administration Building. Basilica steeple also in view
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Image by SouthBendRealtyPhoto.com
FOR SALE: 418 E Angela Blvd. South Bend IN 46617. A spectacular house with views of The University of Notre Dame’s Golden Dome & the Basilica’s steeple, across the road from the Notre Dame Golf Course. Real Estate Photography by South Bend Realty Photo


1/2 bath
real estate course
Image by SouthBendRealtyPhoto.com
FOR SALE: 418 E Angela Blvd. South Bend IN 46617. A spectacular house with views of The University of Notre Dame’s Golden Dome & the Basilica’s steeple, across the road from the Notre Dame Golf Course. Real Estate Photography by South Bend Realty Photo


Kitchen & Eating Nook
real estate course
Image by SouthBendRealtyPhoto.com
FOR SALE: 418 E Angela Blvd. South Bend IN 46617. A spectacular house with views of The University of Notre Dame’s Golden Dome & the Basilica’s steeple, across the road from the Notre Dame Golf Course. Real Estate Photography by South Bend Realty Photo

Looking SE at Gallery Place Building 04 - Chinatown - DC

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Looking SE at Gallery Place Building 04 - Chinatown - DC
pennsylvania real estate
Image by Tim Evanson
Looking southeast down 7th Street NW at the Gallery Building in Washington, D.C.'s Chinatown. The faux-Chinese rotunda (lower left) stands atop the Gallery Place Metro station.

D.C.'s Chinatown was established in 1884. But it wasn't where it is now.

The original Chinatown existed along the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue between 4th and 7th Streets, with the heaviest concentration of residences and businesses near where 4th Street, C Street, and Pennsylvania Avenue met. This was the site of Center Market. Back in the days before refrigeration and corporate ownership of food distribution, people around the United States shopped at privately or publicly owned farmer's markets. D.C.'s food markets were almost all privately owned, and suffered from poor hygiene. Shopping for food meant hoping you didn't come down with the hershey-squirts from the diseases your food would be infected with. The city itself decided to act by building a state-of-the-art market, complete with running water, ice house, and mechanical refrigeration. This was Center Market, and it was so immensely popular that nearly all the downtown trolley lines converged there.

Chinese and other Asian immigrants began moving into the area around Center Market in noticeable numbers as early as 1880. By 1884, the area was known as "Chinatown." As many as 15,000 people lived there. That's an astonishing number, considering that most buildings were only two or three stories high. People were just jammed into Chinatown.

D.C.'s original Chinatown existed as a vibrant community until 1935. Interestingly, throughout the 1800s, the federal government was so small that it could be housed in just five or six three-story office buildings. By 1900, however, it was clear that the federal government needed to grow. In 1926, Congress finally approved construction of six new massive federal office buildings. After two years of discussion, it was decided that the area south of Pennsylvania Avenue had to be totally torn down and these new office buildings constructed there. That was the beginning of Federal Triangle -- the largest conglomeration of federal office buildings anywhere in the country. The first buildings constructed were the Department of Commerce, the Internal Revenue Service building, and the Labor/ICC building (now the headquarters of the EPA). At first these buildings just uprooted the brothels, criminal hideouts, and gambling dens that formed D.C.'s infamous Murder Bay. But as Federal Triangle construction moved eastward, Chinatown had to go. Construction of the National Archives and the Apex Building (which houses the Federal Trade Commission) forced Chinatown to move.

Chinatown had a very well-organized community, however, composed of business leaders, religious leaders, politicians, and well-respected citizens. They quite literally looked for a place in the city where everyone could move together -- lock, stock, and barrel. They chose the current location on H Street NW.

At its peak, the "new" Chinatown extended from G Street NW north to Massachusetts Avenue NW, and from 9th Street NW east to 5th Street NW. But this only lasted for about 50 years. The 1968 riots which came after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. caused many businesses to flee downtown D.C. Chinatown's businesses, too, fell on hard times and many of them closed. Wealthy and middle-class Asian citizens fled for the suburbs, leaving many houses and apartments unoccupied. A mainstay of the community was the OCA Bank, but when it closed Chinatown emptied even further.

Chinatown was saved when the Gallery Place Metro station (Blue and Orange lines) opened in 1976. Determined to save Chinatown as a tourist attraction, in 1986 the city authorized the construction of the Friendship Archway, a million traditional Chinese gate designed by local architect Alfred H. Liu. Symoblizing not only Chinatown but D.C.'s "sister city" status with Beijing, the Friendship Arch is the largest freestanding traditionally constructed Chinese-style arch anywhere in the world.

But Chinatown now is in serious decline. In 1993, Abe Pollin built the MCI Center on two whole city blocks bounded by 6th and 7th Streets NW and F and H Streets NW. The arena opened in 1997, and was renamed the Verizon Center after Verizon purchased the near-bankrupt MCI communications company.

In 1999, wealthy regional real estate investors built a vast new 13-story mixed-use shopping and housing complex over the Gallery Place-Chinatown Metro station. Gallery Place (the building) opened in the fall of 2004. It not only revitalized Chinatown, but revitalized the entire East End. Extensive construction began throughout the area as consumers, tourists, and young people flooded the area. Huge swaths of Chinatown were renovated and turned into restaurants, trendy bars, and up-scale shops.

Unfortunately, this caused rents to skyrocket, and pushed most of the Chinese population of D.C's Chinatown into Maryland and Northern Virginia. The Da Hua market, the last full-service Chinese grocery, closed in 2005. The D.C. Office of Planning created a "cultural redevelopment plan" aimed at bringing Chinese food street vendors back to the area and building an Asian-American international business center. But that was in 2008, and nothing has been implemented as of 2012.

The huge video screens, bright neon lights, trendy stores, and fast-food restaurants (like Chopt, Fuddruckers, TGI Friday's, Chipotle, etc.) draw hundreds of rowdy teenagers to Chinatown. The area is now rife with crime, and D.C. Police, D.C. Housing Police, and anti-gang detectives constantly work and patrol the area to stop street brawls between rival gangs. The Gallery Place metro station is the worst in the system for crime (largely stolen iPods, wallets, and cell phones). Many teens hang out on the steps of the National Portrait Gallery, a block south of this intersection -- taunting one another, eating food from McDonald's, and planning thefts.

I kid you not.

Chinatown has been called "D.C.'s Times Square." It has become a terrible problem.


Looking SE at Gallery Place Building 02 - Chinatown - DC
pennsylvania real estate
Image by Tim Evanson
Looking southeast across 7th Street NW at the Gallery Building in Washington, D.C.'s Chinatown. The faux-Chinese rotunda with video screens stands atop the Gallery Place Metro station.

D.C.'s Chinatown was established in 1884. But it wasn't where it is now.

The original Chinatown existed along the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue between 4th and 7th Streets, with the heaviest concentration of residences and businesses near where 4th Street, C Street, and Pennsylvania Avenue met. This was the site of Center Market. Back in the days before refrigeration and corporate ownership of food distribution, people around the United States shopped at privately or publicly owned farmer's markets. D.C.'s food markets were almost all privately owned, and suffered from poor hygiene. Shopping for food meant hoping you didn't come down with the hershey-squirts from the diseases your food would be infected with. The city itself decided to act by building a state-of-the-art market, complete with running water, ice house, and mechanical refrigeration. This was Center Market, and it was so immensely popular that nearly all the downtown trolley lines converged there.

Chinese and other Asian immigrants began moving into the area around Center Market in noticeable numbers as early as 1880. By 1884, the area was known as "Chinatown." As many as 15,000 people lived there. That's an astonishing number, considering that most buildings were only two or three stories high. People were just jammed into Chinatown.

D.C.'s original Chinatown existed as a vibrant community until 1935. Interestingly, throughout the 1800s, the federal government was so small that it could be housed in just five or six three-story office buildings. By 1900, however, it was clear that the federal government needed to grow. In 1926, Congress finally approved construction of six new massive federal office buildings. After two years of discussion, it was decided that the area south of Pennsylvania Avenue had to be totally torn down and these new office buildings constructed there. That was the beginning of Federal Triangle -- the largest conglomeration of federal office buildings anywhere in the country. The first buildings constructed were the Department of Commerce, the Internal Revenue Service building, and the Labor/ICC building (now the headquarters of the EPA). At first these buildings just uprooted the brothels, criminal hideouts, and gambling dens that formed D.C.'s infamous Murder Bay. But as Federal Triangle construction moved eastward, Chinatown had to go. Construction of the National Archives and the Apex Building (which houses the Federal Trade Commission) forced Chinatown to move.

Chinatown had a very well-organized community, however, composed of business leaders, religious leaders, politicians, and well-respected citizens. They quite literally looked for a place in the city where everyone could move together -- lock, stock, and barrel. They chose the current location on H Street NW.

At its peak, the "new" Chinatown extended from G Street NW north to Massachusetts Avenue NW, and from 9th Street NW east to 5th Street NW. But this only lasted for about 50 years. The 1968 riots which came after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. caused many businesses to flee downtown D.C. Chinatown's businesses, too, fell on hard times and many of them closed. Wealthy and middle-class Asian citizens fled for the suburbs, leaving many houses and apartments unoccupied. A mainstay of the community was the OCA Bank, but when it closed Chinatown emptied even further.

Chinatown was saved when the Gallery Place Metro station (Blue and Orange lines) opened in 1976. Determined to save Chinatown as a tourist attraction, in 1986 the city authorized the construction of the Friendship Archway, a million traditional Chinese gate designed by local architect Alfred H. Liu. Symoblizing not only Chinatown but D.C.'s "sister city" status with Beijing, the Friendship Arch is the largest freestanding traditionally constructed Chinese-style arch anywhere in the world.

But Chinatown now is in serious decline. In 1993, Abe Pollin built the MCI Center on two whole city blocks bounded by 6th and 7th Streets NW and F and H Streets NW. The arena opened in 1997, and was renamed the Verizon Center after Verizon purchased the near-bankrupt MCI communications company.

In 1999, wealthy regional real estate investors built a vast new 13-story mixed-use shopping and housing complex over the Gallery Place-Chinatown Metro station. Gallery Place (the building) opened in the fall of 2004. It not only revitalized Chinatown, but revitalized the entire East End. Extensive construction began throughout the area as consumers, tourists, and young people flooded the area. Huge swaths of Chinatown were renovated and turned into restaurants, trendy bars, and up-scale shops.

Unfortunately, this caused rents to skyrocket, and pushed most of the Chinese population of D.C's Chinatown into Maryland and Northern Virginia. The Da Hua market, the last full-service Chinese grocery, closed in 2005. The D.C. Office of Planning created a "cultural redevelopment plan" aimed at bringing Chinese food street vendors back to the area and building an Asian-American international business center. But that was in 2008, and nothing has been implemented as of 2012.

The huge video screens, bright neon lights, trendy stores, and fast-food restaurants (like Chopt, Fuddruckers, TGI Friday's, Chipotle, etc.) draw hundreds of rowdy teenagers to Chinatown. The area is now rife with crime, and D.C. Police, D.C. Housing Police, and anti-gang detectives constantly work and patrol the area to stop street brawls between rival gangs. The Gallery Place metro station is the worst in the system for crime (largely stolen iPods, wallets, and cell phones). Many teens hang out on the steps of the National Portrait Gallery, a block south of this intersection -- taunting one another, eating food from McDonald's, and planning thefts.

I kid you not.

Chinatown has been called "D.C.'s Times Square." It has become a terrible problem.

Shamokin, Pennsylvania, USA Castle For Sale - Church Building For Sale In Shamokin, PA

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Shamokin, Pennsylvania, USA Castle For Sale - Church Building For Sale In Shamokin, PA
pennsylvania real estate
Image by International Real Estate Listings
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Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, USA Castle For Sale - Church For Sale In Mt Carmel, Pennsylvania
pennsylvania real estate
Image by International Real Estate Listings
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Miami - Downtown Miami: Ingraham Building

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Miami - Downtown Miami: Ingraham Building
indiana real estate
Image by wallyg
The Ingraham Building, at 25 Southeast 2nd Avenue, was built in 1926 to the Renaissance Revival design of Schultze and Weaver. It was built by the Model Land Company, the real estate division of the Florida East Coast Railway, as a memorial to James E. Ingraham, former president of the Model Land Company, who, in conjunction with William Brickell and Julia Tuttle, persuaded Henry Flagler to extend his railway from Palm Beach to Miami. The lifting of height restrictions in 1925 allowed the Ingraham Building to rise to 12-stories, divided into three-part Classical composition of base, main body, and projecting cornice. The building is distinguished by its Indiana limestone cladding, rustication that diminishes with height, and wide, prominent eaves with polychrome rafters.

National Register #88002958 (1989)
Downtown Miami Historic District National Register #05001356 (2005)


Miami - Downtown Miami: Ingraham Building
indiana real estate
Image by wallyg
The Ingraham Building, at 25 Southeast 2nd Avenue, was built in 1926 to the Renaissance Revival design of Schultze and Weaver. It was built by the Model Land Company, the real estate division of the Florida East Coast Railway, as a memorial to James E. Ingraham, former president of the Model Land Company, who, in conjunction with William Brickell and Julia Tuttle, persuaded Henry Flagler to extend his railway from Palm Beach to Miami. The lifting of height restrictions in 1925 allowed the Ingraham Building to rise to 12-stories, divided into three-part Classical composition of base, main body, and projecting cornice. The building is distinguished by its Indiana limestone cladding, rustication that diminishes with height, and wide, prominent eaves with polychrome rafters.

National Register #88002958 (1989)
Downtown Miami Historic District National Register #05001356 (2005)

Pompano Beach, Florida , USA Commercial Building For Sale - 2048 NW 17th Street, Pompano Beach, FL

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Pompano Beach, Florida , USA Commercial Building For Sale - 2048 NW 17th Street, Pompano Beach, FL
real estate in florida
Image by International Real Estate Listings
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Pompano Beach Florida USA Commercial Building For Sale
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Image by International Real Estate Listings
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NYC - Midtown: Fred R French Building

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NYC - Midtown: Fred R French Building
real estate nyc
Image by wallyg
The Fred F. French Building, at 551 Fifth Avenue, was built in 1927 for the Fred Fillmore French, who began his real estate career in 1908.

The Fred F. French Building, at 551 Fifth Avenue, was built by H. Douglas Ives and Sloan & Robertson in 1927 for Fred Fillmore French, a real estate devleoper who created the Tudor City residential complex. The 38-story art deco tower features a three-story base clad in limestone and and decorated with bronze paneling. Currently owned by the Feil Organization, it is primarily used as an office building.

The Fred F. French Building was designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1986.

National Register #03001514 (2004)

Bonfils Building

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Bonfils Building
wa real estate
Image by carletaorg
Bonfils Building

The 1890 City Directory lists 107 S. 2nd as F.C. Bonfils Real Estate with residence on 2nd floor. Son of a Missouri Judge and descendant of Napoleon, he was 28 when he joined the Land Run of 1889. A colorful con man and lottery promoter, he had but one intention ~~ to make money for Bonfils. His confidence games forced him to leave town after constructing this first native stone business building in Guthrie. Among his schemes was selling town lots in Oklahoma City at bargain prices ~~ but they were in Oklahoma City, Texas, not Oklahoma, as most supposed. Bonfils was also involved in a "money making michine" which duped early settlers into believing the machine actually made large bills from small ones.

He later went to Denver and wa con-founder of the Denver Post newspaper. He died 1932, a wealthy and nationally influential figure.

Presented by the Donald. W. Reynolds Foundation - 1980

Guthrie,OK


Bonfils Building
wa real estate
Image by carletaorg
Bonfils Building

The 1890 City Directory lists 107 S. 2nd as F.C. Bonfils Real Estate with residence on 2nd floor. Son of a Missouri Judge and descendant of Napoleon, he was 28 when he joined the Land Run of 1889. A colorful con man and lottery promoter, he had but one intention ~~ to make money for Bonfils. His confidence games forced him to leave town after constructing this first native stone business building in Guthrie. Among his schemes was selling town lots in Oklahoma City at bargain prices ~~ but they were in Oklahoma City, Texas, not Oklahoma, as most supposed. Bonfils was also involved in a "money making michine" which duped early settlers into believing the machine actually made large bills from small ones.

He later went to Denver and wa con-founder of the Denver Post newspaper. He died 1932, a wealthy and nationally influential figure.

Presented by the Donald. W. Reynolds Foundation - 1990


Pike Place Market
wa real estate
Image by Cria-cow
If you live in Seattle, you're contractually obligated to take this picture at least once. Seriously; it's in the real estate paperwork, somewhere around page 85. Looking at Pike Place Public Market with the Puget Sound and Alki beyond, right around sunset, Seattle, WA.

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