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Herring Hotel (Amarillo, Texas)

Buildings and structures completed in 1926Buildings and structures in Amarillo, TexasEconomy of Amarillo, TexasHotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in TexasNational Register of Historic Places in Potter County, Texas
Skyscraper hotels in TexasSkyscraper office buildings in AmarilloSkyscrapers in TexasTexas Registered Historic Place stubsTexas building and structure stubs
Herring Hotel edited, Amarillo, TX
Herring Hotel edited, Amarillo, TX

The Herring Hotel is one of the oldest buildings in downtown Amarillo, Texas. It was completed in 1926 and was named after the builder and operator, Cornelius Taylor Herring (1849–1931). The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 25, 2024.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Herring Hotel (Amarillo, Texas) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Herring Hotel (Amarillo, Texas)
Southeast 3rd Avenue, Amarillo

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.210277777778 ° E -101.8325 °
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Address

Southeast 3rd Avenue

Southeast 3rd Avenue
79105 Amarillo
Texas, United States
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Herring Hotel edited, Amarillo, TX
Herring Hotel edited, Amarillo, TX
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Nearby Places

Amarillo Civic Center
Amarillo Civic Center

The Amarillo Civic Center is a multi-purpose convention center in Amarillo, Texas. It consists of multiple facilities including: A 2,848-seat auditorium with 2,324 permanent seats used for concerts, Broadway shows and other events. The Cal Farley Coliseum, a 4,987-seat multi-purpose arena serving as home to the Amarillo Wranglers of the North American Hockey League and the Amarillo Venom of Champions Indoor Football. The arena, which has 4,879 permanent seats, is also used for concerts, banquets, conventions, ice shows, wrestling and trade shows (the arena features 17,100 square feet (1,590 m2) of floor space). The arena measures 38' 10 from floor to rafters, 50'10 from floor to ceiling. A 16,000-square-foot (1,500 m2) grand plaza, designed as a tribute to Texas and seating up to 1,100 for smaller concerts, banquets, and other special events. It contains a Texas-accented floor, skylight ceiling, and fountains and planters. Two exhibit halls, the North which has 24,565 square feet (2,282 m2) of exhibit space, used for trade shows, conventions, meetings and banquets (capacity is up to 2,200) and with a 25-foot (8 m) ceiling height; and a 26,000-square-foot (2,400 m2), 14-foot (4 m) South Exhibit Hall, also used for similar events. Three meeting rooms—the Heritage, Hospitality, and Regency rooms.There is a memorial statue of the Space Shuttle commander Rick Husband, one of the city's most famous sons, in front of the building.

FirstBank Southwest Tower
FirstBank Southwest Tower

FirstBank Southwest Tower is a 374-foot, 31-story building located in Amarillo, Texas, United States. Formerly known as SPS Tower, Bank One Center, Chase Tower, and Amarillo Tower, it is the tallest building in Amarillo and the West Texas region. The building used to be the home of the Amarillo branch of American National Bank. The building also housed the offices of the region's electric power service provider, Southwestern Public Service (which was later acquired by Xcel Energy).The Tower has a striking resemblance to the One Financial Plaza Building in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The First Bank Southwest Tower is only about three stories taller than its counterpart. In October 2008, the West Texas A&M University letters were installed on the First Bank Southwest Tower as part of the agreement to have university classes there.In 2018, Chase decided to close its downtown Amarillo branch in the building. By June 2018, FirstBank Southwest reached an agreement to locate a downtown branch there and receive naming rights on the building in the process. The FDIC approved the application by October 2018, for FirstBank Southwest to have a branch in the building, and the bank plans to be operational there by the middle of 2019. Work began in late March 2019 to place the letters for the logo sign for FirstBank Southwest at the top of the tower in three places. The process was scheduled to take around two weeks' time.The tower was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 6, 2019.