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Larkin Terminal Warehouse

Buildings and structures in Buffalo, New YorkHeadquarters in the United States
Larkin Terminal Warehouse rear
Larkin Terminal Warehouse rear

The Larkin Terminal Warehouse also known as Larkin at Exchange or the Larkin R/S/T Building : p.88  is located at 726 Exchange Street, Buffalo, New York in a neighborhood known as the "Hydraulics". The neighborhood was one of Buffalo's earliest industrial districts and it derived its name from the construction of a small hydraulic canal. The building, clearly visible from the I-190 interstate, was originally part of the Larkin Company and was one of the last constructed buildings in the complex. The building has a radio tower on the roof erected by WEBR-AM in 1936.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Larkin Terminal Warehouse (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Larkin Terminal Warehouse
Exchange Street, Buffalo

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Wikipedia: Larkin Terminal WarehouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.8751 ° E -78.8519 °
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Address

Exchange Street 696
14210 Buffalo
New York, United States
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Larkin Terminal Warehouse rear
Larkin Terminal Warehouse rear
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The Kamman Building
The Kamman Building

The John F. Kamman Building is a historic commercial building located at Buffalo in Erie County, New York. It designed by Buffalo architect F.W. Caulkins and built in 1883. A four-story brick building, it was designed in the Romanesque Renaissance style. The Kamman Building is located within the Hydraulics Neighborhood, Buffalo's oldest manufacturing district. A post office substation was located in the building starting in 1893. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010.A 4-story building of "7-rank brick" and Medina sandstone it has a ground floor storefront featuring cast iron pilasters, a lion head ornament and a "The Kamman" sign above the door.The property was owned by the Kamman family until 1916, when it was sold to the Larkin Company.The building's location in the Hydraulics area was near the large livestock yards and rail lines booming in the nineteenth-century (Buffalo was second only to Chicago in the number of cattle and hogs it handled). German butchers such as the Kamman family (immigrants who arrived in the mid-1800s) established themselves. Henry Kamman ran a butcher shop at 573-575 Seneca Street and Jefferson Avenue while brother John F. Kamman purchased property in the 700 block of Seneca during the 1850s and early 1860s and built the J. F. Kamman Slaughterhouse including barns, processing buildings, and sheds. The family also lived on the property. The Kamman Building was constructed around 1886 by John F. Kamman at 755-757 Seneca Street. John H. Kamman (son of Henry) continued the trade and the John H. Kamman Company was built into one of the city's largest meat markets and grocery store chains (including more than 30 stores). The Kamman Building at 757 Seneca Street was home to one of the markets in 1903.