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Grand Central Hotel (Omaha, Nebraska)

1873 establishments in Nebraska1878 disestablishments in NebraskaBuildings and structures demolished in 1878Burned hotels in the United StatesDefunct hotels in Omaha, Nebraska
Hotel buildings completed in 1873Pioneer history of Omaha, Nebraska
Grand Central Hotel, Omaha, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views
Grand Central Hotel, Omaha, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views

The Grand Central Hotel was an early hotel establishment formerly located at 14th and Farnam Streets in downtown Omaha, Nebraska. The Grand Central was built as Omaha's premier lodging after the Herndon House became the Union Pacific Headquarters.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Grand Central Hotel (Omaha, Nebraska) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Grand Central Hotel (Omaha, Nebraska)
Farnam Street, Omaha

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.25756 ° E -95.93443 °
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Address

Nebraska State Office Building

Farnam Street
68132 Omaha
Nebraska, United States
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Grand Central Hotel, Omaha, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views
Grand Central Hotel, Omaha, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views
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Mutual of Omaha Headquarters Tower
Mutual of Omaha Headquarters Tower

The Mutual of Omaha Headquarters Tower will be a c. 650-foot (200 m), 40-50 story skyscraper at 1614 Dodge Street in Downtown Omaha, Nebraska. It is estimated that it will be completed in 2026.On January 26, 2022, Mayor Jean Stothert and Mutual of Omaha announced a pair of major developments for the city. Mutual of Omaha will move its headquarters into the downtown core to the site of the former W. Dale Clark branch of the Omaha Public Library, with a skyscraper that will transform downtown Omaha's skyline; the proposed 40-to-50 story height of the building will give it the potential to be the new tallest building in Omaha. Stothert also revealed plans for a streetcar from the riverfront park to the University of Nebraska Medical Center. The plan entails the library branch to be out of its current building by September 2022, with demolition in December. On February 2, 2022, the Omaha City Council voted 4 to 3 to approve lease agreements for a new downtown library location, in a building at 1401 Jones Street, a spot just west of the Old Market. Council members Aimee Melton, Brinker Harding, Don Rowe and Pete Festersen voted in favor of the lease, while Danny Begley, Juanita Johnson and Vinny Palermo voted against.On February 25, 2022, Mutual of Omaha requested more than $60 million in tax increment financing. Omaha Planning Department documents and plans submitted to the city refer to the tower as "Project Beacon." The skyscraper will include 800,000 square feet of office space and 2,200 parking stalls. The skyscraper has a projected price tag of $433 million. Project Beacon is part of a plan to add 30,000 new jobs and 30,000 new residents in the Downtown Omaha in the next two decades. Several elements are already in the works, including Project NExT at UNMC, redevelopment of the W. Dale Clark library site, and a streetcar running from Midtown to Downtown. Greater Omaha Chamber of Commerce's President and CEO David Brown said in the last decade, the metro's population grew by about 12 percent. Brown said the area needs to continue that momentum, and maybe increase it, if it wants to move forward. "If we don't, then businesses are going to be faced with a situation where if they can't find the people that they need, they will invest in other places instead to find those people and that's just not a good sign for us," Brown said, "If that becomes the norm, then Omaha stops growing. If Omaha stops growing, it doesn't stay the same, it shrinks. Because in this business, you're either growing or you're shrinking. I've long had a dream, that we would be on the list. That when we talk to any college students in the Midwest and say what cities are you willing to consider to live and work in? That Omaha's in their top 10. We're not in the top 10 yet. We're not in the top 20. So we've got some work to do," Brown said.The streetcar would span a three-mile (4.8 km) stretch from Cass Street to Farnam Street on South 10th Street, Farnam west to 42nd Street, and back to 10th Street on Harney Street. Stothert said the streetcar will be built, operated and maintained without a property tax or sales tax increase. The streetcar will also be free to all riders. According to a press release, the streetcar project is projected to cost $306 million, which includes a 35% contingency. The streetcar system and Mutual of Omaha Tower will be designed in 2022 and 2023, with construction to run from January 2023 through 2025 and testing and initial operation scheduled for 2026.

Killing of James Scurlock
Killing of James Scurlock

On May 30, 2020, James Scurlock, a 22-year-old black male protester, was fatally shot by a 38-year-old bar owner, Jacob "Jake" Gardner after instigating the incident. The shooting took place during the George Floyd protests in Omaha, Nebraska, in the Old Market area of the city, where Scurlock and friends had been among the thousands of protesters who flooded the city's downtown area to cause destruction.Surveillance video of the strip of bars shows a group of people, including Scurlock, approached by Jacob Gardner, his father, and one other male in the street. An altercation began after Scurlock pushed Gardner's father and Gardner's father pushed one of the protestors while asking the group to leave. Another protester ran up and shoved Gardner's father to the ground and then ran away. Gardner, who was nearby, revealed a weapon from his waistband while moving backwards and threatening the group, including Scurlock directly, to "keep the [explicit] away from me". Two people shoved Gardner to the ground, one tackling him, Gardner then fired shots into the air in an effort to warn off the attackers and protect his father. Seconds later, Scurlock jumped on Gardner and had his arm across Gardner's throat. Gardner then fired the gun over his shoulder in an effort to escape the choke hold, striking Scurlock in the clavicle.After 36 hours Gardner was released from police custody after the county attorney concluded that he had acted in self-defense against Scurlock, who had attempted to place Gardner in a headlock. The decision proved controversial amid accusations of racial motivation. It has been described as exacerbating tensions in the United States, and the case was referred to a grand jury for review; a grand jury returned indictments against Gardner on September 15 on four felony criminal charges, including manslaughter. Special prosecutor Fred Franklin stated that Gardner had been "threatening the use of deadly force in the absence of being threatened with ... deadly force by James Scurlock or anyone who was associated with him."On September 20, 2020, the deadline for Gardner to turn himself in, he committed suicide outside a medical center in Hillsboro, Oregon, where he had moved after the incident. His death is currently under investigation by Hillsboro police and medical examiners.

Redick Tower
Redick Tower

The Redick Tower, operated since 2011 as The Hotel Deco, is an eleven-story building located at 1504 Harney Street in Omaha, Nebraska. The building is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The building was designed in the Art Deco style by Omaha architect Joseph G. McArthur. It was named after the Redick family, who had been among Omaha's pioneer settlers, arriving in 1856, and who had owned the land on which the building was constructed. As designed, it housed commercial storefront space on the first floor, indoor parking and garage facilities for up to 500 cars on the lower seven floors, and office space in the tower above the parking levels.The Redick Tower was built for Garrett and Agor, Inc., which managed it until the mid-1930s, when it was purchased by the Redick Tower Corporation. In 1943, it was bought by Omaha investor Walter Duda, who held it until 1973, when it was acquired by the Denver-based Parking Corporation of America. It was subsequently operated as a Radisson Hotel "considered among Omaha's best" and then as the Best Western Redick Plaza Hotel until it closed in 2009. In 2010, it was purchased by the White Lotus Group, which opened it in the following year as the Hotel Deco.In 1984, the building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Its historic significance was attributed to its original multifunctional urban design, combining retail, office, and parking space in a single building; and to its being "one of Nebraska's premier examples" of the Art Deco style.