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Gold and Company Store Building

1924 establishments in NebraskaArt Deco architecture in NebraskaCommercial buildings completed in 1924Gothic Revival architecture in NebraskaNational Register of Historic Places in Lincoln, Nebraska
Nebraska Registered Historic Place stubs
Gold's building (Lincoln, Nebraska) from NE 3
Gold's building (Lincoln, Nebraska) from NE 3

The Gold and Company Store Building is a historic commercial building in Lincoln, Nebraska. It was built in 1924 for the Gold and Company Store, co-founded by William Gold and later managed by his son Nathan, until its 1964 merger with J. L. Brandeis and Sons. The building was designed in the Gothic Revival and Art Deco styles. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since October 19, 1982.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gold and Company Store Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gold and Company Store Building
O Street, Lincoln

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.813333333333 ° E -96.705833333333 °
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Address

Scooter's Coffee House

O Street 1033
68508 Lincoln
Nebraska, United States
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Phone number

call4024745282

Website
scooterscoffee.com

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Gold's building (Lincoln, Nebraska) from NE 3
Gold's building (Lincoln, Nebraska) from NE 3
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Nearby Places

Burr Block
Burr Block

The Burr Block, at 1206 O St. in Lincoln, Nebraska, is a long-salient building which was built in 1887 and later expanded to become a skyscraper. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.It has also been known as the Security Mutual Building, as the Veterans Administration Building, and as the Anderson Building. The original designer and construction supervisor was James Tyler. The firm of Berlinghof & Davis apparently were the architects the 1916 expansion when four additional stories were added. Its NRHP nomination describes its importance as:historically significant to Lincoln and Nebraska as being a highly visible chronicle of two prosperous eras in the city and state. In this capacity the Burr Block is also an exemplary instance of changing modes in American architecture: initially constructed in 1887 as a romantic Victorian edifice, it was transformed twenty-nine years later into a modern, ten-story "skyscraper"- up-to-date construction methods being employed, but stone remaining the principal medium. These factors accord the Burr Block as a unique remnant of late-19th and early-20th-century business activities on "0" Street, Lincoln's main thoroughfare. Since its initial construction the building has been associated with persons significant on the local, state, and national levels, and for over four decades the building was home office to an important insurance company that experienced tremendous growth during its period of occupancy.