Articles in United States ( 111,301 )

111,301 Articles of interest in United States

Click on them to get its location and coordinates
  • 50 South Sixth

    50 South Sixth is a 404-ft (123 m) tall skyscraper in Minneapolis. It was completed in 2001 and has 30 floors. It is the 18th-tallest building in the city. A skyway connects this building to the 15 Building, Renaissance Square, City Center, and Gavi…

  • Central (Metro Transit station)

    Central (formerly known as 4th & Cedar until November 2011) is a light rail station along the Green Line in Saint Paul, Minnesota. It is unique among Central Corridor stations in that it is not located in the middle of or directly adjacent to a road…

  • 46th Street (SEPTA station)

    46th Street Station is an elevated stop on the Market-Frankford Line, above the intersection of Farragut (between 46th and 47th streets) and Market Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the Mill Creek neighborhood of West Philadelphia.

  • 440 South Church

    440 South Church is a 15-story skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina with 363,000 square feet (33,700 m2) of space. Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart & Associates designed the building, and Bovis Lend Lease was the general contractor. Major te…

  • 3rd Street (LYNX station)

    The 3rd Street station is a light rail station on the LYNX Blue Line in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S.A.. The station is located between East Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and East 3rd Street between North Brevard Street and South Colleg…

  • 37th Street (SEPTA station)

    37th Street/Spruce Street/Woodland Avenue is a SEPTA Subway-Surface Lines trolley station. It is the last station in the tunnel before the 40th Street Subway Portal and carries Subway-Surface Trolley Routes 11, 13, 34, & 36. The entrance to go down …

  • 37 Wall Street

    37 Wall Street was built as an office building on Manhattan's Wall Street. It was designed by Francis Kimball and constructed during 1906-1907 for The Trust Company of America which occupied the ground floor. The building, completed in 1907, stands …

  • 3300 North Central Avenue

    3300 North Central Avenue (also known as 3300 Tower) is a high-rise located along Central Avenue in Uptown Phoenix, Arizona, United States. The tower rises 27 floors and 356 feet (109 m) in height. Designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, 3300 Nort…

  • 320 South Boston Building

    The 320 South Boston Building, formerly known as the National Bank of Tulsa Building, is a 22-story highrise building located in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was originally constructed at the corner of Third Street and Boston Avenue as a ten-story h…

  • 300 North Meridian

    300 North Meridian is a high rise in Indianapolis, Indiana. Construction started in 1987, financed by Browning Investments. The architects, Hadleman Miller Bregman Hamann, built the outside with brownish-reddish granite and black windows, and capped…

  • 2nd and King Station

    2nd and King Station is an island platform light rail station of the San Francisco Municipal Railway's Muni Metro system located in the median of The Embarcadero at Second Street in Mission Bay, San Francisco, California adjacent to AT&T Park.

  • 28th Avenue (Metro Transit station)

    The 28th Avenue light rail and bus station is on the Blue Line and Red Line in the Twin Cities region of the U.S. state of Minnesota. The station opened with the Blue Line light rail on December 4, 2004 and the Red Line began service at the station …

  • 2345 Grand

    2345 Grand (formerly the IBM Plaza, IBM Building and Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company Building) is a skyscraper in Kansas City Missouri. It is listed on many sites as being the work of Mies van der Rohe, however, he died in 1969 before the 1977…

  • 2009 Idaho Vandals football team

    The 2009 Idaho Vandals American football team represented the University of Idaho during the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Vandals, led by third-year head coach Robb Akey, were members of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) and pla…

  • 1998 St. Cloud explosion

    The 1998 St. Cloud explosion was a gas explosion that occurred in St. Cloud, Minnesota on December 11, 1998. A work crew installing a utility pole support anchor punctured an underground natural gas pipeline, causing the explosion.

  • 1984 Idaho Vandals football team

    The 1984 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho in the 1984 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Vandals, led by third-year head coach Dennis Erickson, were members of the Big Sky Conference and played their home games at…

  • 1980 Idaho Vandals football team

    The 1980 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho in the 1980 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Vandals were led by third-year head coach Jerry Davitch and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They played their home g…

  • 1955 Hawaiian submarine eruption

    The 1955 Hawaiian submarine eruption was a submarine eruption that occurred 90 km (56 mi) northeast of Necker Island on August 20, 1955. Steaming water, water discoloration and an eruption column took place during the eruption. A possible pumice raf…

  • 16th Ward of New Orleans

    The 16th Ward or Sixteenth Ward is a division of the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, one of the 17 Wards of New Orleans. New Orleans Districts and Wards. It is an Uptown ward, along with the adjacent 17th Ward formerly part of the city of Carrollton…

  • 16th Street (Sacramento RT)

    16th Street is a side platformed Sacramento RT light rail station in Downtown Sacramento, California, United States. The station was opened on September 5, 1987, and is operated by the Sacramento Regional Transit District. As part of both the Gold a…

  • 1600 Glenarm Place

    1600 Glenarm Place is a 384 ft (117m) tall skyscraper in Denver, Colorado. Completed in 1967 as the Security Life Building, it has 32 floors. It was converted from office to residential use in 2006, and has 330 units. It is the 21st tallest building…

  • 156th Street (IRT Third Avenue Line)

    156th Street was a local station on the demolished IRT Third Avenue Line. It originally opened on July 1, 1887 and had three tracks and two side platforms. The next stop to the north was 161st Street. The next stop to the south was 149th Street.