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Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse

1905 establishments in North CarolinaBuildings and structures in Durham, North CarolinaDurham County, North Carolina Registered Historic Place stubsIndustrial buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaIndustrial buildings completed in 1905
National Register of Historic Places in Durham County, North CarolinaTobacco buildings in the United States
Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse
Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse

Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse is a historic tobacco storage warehouse located at Durham, Durham County, North Carolina. It consists of three storage units: Unit 1 and Unit 2 were built in 1905 and Unit 3 in the 1910s. It is a two-story, brick structure and is an example of "slow burn" masonry and wood factory construction. The warehouse is located adjacent to the Venable Tobacco Company Prizery and Receiving Room, which collectively are the only structures that remain of a larger complex.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse
South Dillard Street, Durham

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Latitude Longitude
N 35.991944444444 ° E -78.9 °
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South Dillard Street 502
27701 Durham
North Carolina, United States
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Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse
Venable Tobacco Company Warehouse
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Hill Building
Hill Building

The Hill Building is a 17-story modernistic skyscraper located in Durham, North Carolina. Built in 1935–1937, the Hill Building was designed by New York City architecture firm Shreve, Lamb & Harmon, best known for the design of the Empire State Building. Named for John Sprunt Hill, and built to house the Durham Bank & Trust Company, the building is outfitted with Art Deco ornamentation, interior fluted doors and an exquisitely crafted letter box. The building is in the heart of downtown Durham, located at the intersection of Main and Corcoran Streets. The Hill building was home to Durham Bank & Trust and its successor, Central Carolina Bank and Trust, from 1937 until its 2005 purchase by SunTrust Banks, which had its local headquarters in the building until 2006.Greenfire Real Estate Holdings, which bought the Hill Building in 2006, successfully renovated the building into a 165-room luxury hotel. The city of Durham voted to add $4.2 million after a September 20, 2010 public hearing regarding this plan, and Durham County voted to add $1 million. Greenfire hoped historic tax credits would provide $11 million, and other tax credits would add $4 million.In February 2013, Greenfire formed a joint venture with Kentucky-based hotel operator 21C Museum Hotels. Construction began in late July 2013 and was completed in 2015. Skanska was in charge of the construction project in partnership with 21c Museum Hotels. The renovation also includes a plan for a contemporary art museum, upscale restaurants, bar and ballroom. The museum is open 24 hours per day and offers free admission. An estimated $48 million was spent to complete the entire renovation for the Hill Building. The hotel itself was inducted into Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, in 2019.