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Radisson Hotel Baltimore Downtown-Inner Harbor

Downtown BaltimoreHotel buildings completed in 1967Hotels established in 1967Skyscraper hotels in Baltimore
Former Statler Hilton Baltimore Sheraton Baltimore City Center (1967; William B. Tabler, architect), 101 W. Fayette Street, Baltimore, MD 21201 (46718710092)
Former Statler Hilton Baltimore Sheraton Baltimore City Center (1967; William B. Tabler, architect), 101 W. Fayette Street, Baltimore, MD 21201 (46718710092)

The Radisson Hotel Baltimore Downtown-Inner Harbor is a vacant high-rise hotel complex located in Baltimore, Maryland, opened in 1967. The hotel complex contains 707 rooms in two nearly identical towers. The south tower was converted to a separate hotel in 2018, the Holiday Inn Baltimore - Inner Harbor, sharing all facilities with the Radisson. Both hotels closed permanently in March 2022, for conversion to apartments.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Radisson Hotel Baltimore Downtown-Inner Harbor (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Radisson Hotel Baltimore Downtown-Inner Harbor
West Fayette Street, Baltimore Downtown

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Latitude Longitude
N 39.29 ° E -76.617222222222 °
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West Fayette Street 101
21201 Baltimore, Downtown
Maryland, United States
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Former Statler Hilton Baltimore Sheraton Baltimore City Center (1967; William B. Tabler, architect), 101 W. Fayette Street, Baltimore, MD 21201 (46718710092)
Former Statler Hilton Baltimore Sheraton Baltimore City Center (1967; William B. Tabler, architect), 101 W. Fayette Street, Baltimore, MD 21201 (46718710092)
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Maryland Theater (Baltimore)

The Maryland Theater was a music venue in Baltimore, Maryland, home to that city's first jazz band, led by John Ridgely. It was originally built for James Lawrence Kernan (1838-1912) as a vaudeville house, in 1903, adjacent to his Hotel Kernan (later renamed the Congress Hotel). It included a rathskeller in the basement with some of the first music in town from a "jazz band" led by John Ridgley, at what became known later as "The Marble Bar", a musical venue even up to the 1980s. Located facing West Franklin Street, between North Paca Street and west of North Howard Street, which was one of the fanciest hotels in the city at the time constructed of Beaux Arts/Classical Revival style architecture. Unfortunately, in the 1950s, the old Maryland Theatre was razed and temporarily replaced by a parking lot for the last days of the hotel. Kernan was also a member of the city's Board of Park Commissioners and a member of the old Baltimore City Jail Board. He was also the founder of the James Lawrence Kernan Hospital at his "Radnor Park" estate in northwest Baltimore's Forest Park neighborhood near Woodlawn in suburban Baltimore County. The hospital built in the 1920s era with buildings around the old mansion of 1860-1867 construction of Greek Revival and Colonial Revival styled architecture. Today it is a part of the state's University of Maryland Medical Center as the "University of Maryland Rehabilitation & Orthopaedic Institute". The old Kernan/Congress Hotel was renovated and restored in 2004-2005 as apartments and condos by the locally famous architect and construction firm, Streuver Brothers, Eccles and Rouse as one of their last renewal projects of three decades in the city.

One Charles Center
One Charles Center

One Charles Center is a historic office building located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a 23-story aluminum and glass International Style skyscraper designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and constructed in 1962. It was the first modernistic office tower in Baltimore and part of the city's downtown urban renewal movement. The base consists of a concrete-faced podium topped by a paved plaza, with the "T"-shaped office tower atop. The tower includes metal trim and gray glass.The tower was previously the subject of a design competition. It was completed in 13 months at a cost of $10,350,000. One Charles Center was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. It is located next to the Fidelity Building, which was completed in the 1890s.In 1983, the Charles Center stop of the Baltimore Metro Subway opened one block south of the Charles Center complex at the intersection of Baltimore Street and Charles Street. This stop serves as a transportation hub that connects the Metro (extending west to the northwest suburbs of the city and east to Johns Hopkins Hospital) to local bus routes and the Charm City Circulator.An anchor tenant, CSX Corporation, sold and vacated the property in the mid-1990s, leaving the tenancy rate low. This prompted an auction for new ownership in which Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, its mortgage holder, bought One Charles Center in 1993 for $11.5 million. Three years later in 1996, the building was purchased for $6 million by Peter Angelos, a lawyer native to Baltimore and the majority owner of the Baltimore Orioles major league baseball team. After renovations, new tenants moved into the building, including the law offices of Peter Angelos as well as the firm Wright Constable & Skeen.Former tenants of One Charles Center include T. Rowe Price, an investment counsel firm and the Center Club of Baltimore.