Corgan Associates, Inc. , commonly known as Corgan , is an American multinational architecture and design firm headquartered in Dallas, Texas . It is the fourth-largest architecture firm in the United States and one of the world's largest by revenue and number of architects. In 2023, Corgan generated a revenue of US$ 426.89 million and currently employs over 1000 professionals across 18 offices worldwide.
17-902: The Dallas Hilton , constructed as the Hilton Hotel and today operating as the Hotel Indigo Dallas Downtown , is a historic hotel opened in 1925, located at the corner of Main Street and S. Harwood Street in downtown Dallas , Texas ( United States ). The hotel is a contributing property in the Harwood Street Historic District and Main Street District . It is also located across the street from Main Street Garden Park . The Hilton Hotel , built by Conrad Hilton ,
34-423: A $ 5 million renovation that introduced hardwood floors, spa-like guest bathrooms, a business center and an upgraded fitness area. Today the hotel contains 3,000 square feet (280 m) of meeting space and 169 rooms. [REDACTED] Media related to Hilton Hotel (Dallas, Texas) at Wikimedia Commons Hotel Indigo Hotel Indigo is a global brand group of small, individually owned boutique hotels, which
51-632: A city where there were few alternatives. During the Great Depression, Hilton lost four hotels and saved five, one of which was the Dallas Hilton. In 1938, he relinquished the operating lease of the Dallas Hilton after his move to California. George Loudermilk, the owner, contracted with another well known hotel operator in Texas, A. C. "Jack" White, in July 1938 to run the hotel. White changed
68-492: A prominent high rise hotel. For the building site Hilton chose the highest point in downtown Dallas. Hilton retained the prominent architectural firm of Lang and Witchell , one of the two most respected firms in Dallas, to design the new hotel. They designed the hotel as a 14-story, reinforced concrete and masonry structure in a simplified Sullivanesque style with symmetrical facades and Beaux Arts detailing. Its horseshoe plan
85-595: Is part of IHG Hotels & Resorts (InterContinental Hotels Group). As of June 2024 it has 156 hotels with over 20,000 rooms worldwide, and has stated that it plans to open more than 150 further hotels. The first Hotel Indigo opened in Atlanta, Georgia , US in October 2004 and a second location opened in the historic Gold Coast neighborhood of Chicago , Illinois in May 2005 (later being foreclosed and re-branding as
102-603: Is similar to that of the Magnolia Building and features two massive towers projecting toward Harwood Street which form an open court. The towers were tied together on the main (Harwood) facade with a frontispiece entrance and an elaborate bridge at the tenth level. Ground was broken on July 25, 1924 and the building was completed just over one year later for a total cost of $ 1.36 million—Hilton's second most costly Texas highrise. The hotel officially opened on Thursday, August 6, 1925. Hilton maximized all available space in
119-676: The Dallas Love Field Airport Terminal, which was the primary airport for Dallas at the time and Corgan's first major commercial project. Their plans for the terminal included features such as a mezzanine dining room and moving walkways for airline passengers, which were considered innovative concepts at the time. In 1979, Corgan formalized its data center architecture practice. As of 2018, Corgan has completed more than 1,200 data centers for technology and telecommunications companies globally. The firm's annual revenue from data center architecture ranked top in
136-712: The Claridge House). The chain's first non-US property, which in 2017 became the independent Metcalfe Hotel, was opened in Ottawa , Ontario, Canada. [REDACTED] Media related to Hotel Indigo at Wikimedia Commons Corgan (company) Corgan's origins can be traced back to a focus on movie theaters and drive-ins in its early years, the firm has since diversified its portfolio, providing architectural services in aviation, commercial, data centers, education, healthcare, mixed-use, multifamily, offices, and workplaces. Founded in 1938 by Jack Corgan in Dallas, Texas,
153-525: The Dallas Plaza Partners of California, made up of Hotel Equity Management and Blackmond, Garlock and Flynn real estate merchant banker of San Francisco. The Dallas Plaza Partners contracted with Corgan to restore the hotel and Jerry O'Hara to renovate the interior, which took ten months. In December 1985, The Dallas Plaza Hotel opened its doors. It was later renamed The Aristocrat Hotel of Dallas and managed by Holiday Inn . The building
170-414: The firm became better known after completing a series of hotels along Route 66 and movie palaces in small towns like Vernon, Texas , and Chickasha, Oklahoma , during the late 1930s to the 1950s. In this period, Corgan designed and completed over 90 movie theaters, some of which remain operational or have undergone adaptive reuse, serving as historic landmarks. In 1956, Corgan was selected to design
187-474: The hotel began to deteriorate and decline in popularity. In 1977, Opal Sebastian, real estate investor, purchased the building and changed the name to the Plaza Hotel . All floors above the fourth level had been closed for an unknown period of time, and all rooms were in poor condition. Sebastian reopened the floors one at a time as they were rehabilitated. On February 15, 1985, the hotel was sold again to
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#1732779894755204-472: The idea of a 99-year land lease with the Dallas Hilton. The concept was well known in the East in 1925, but it was new to Texas commerce circles. Hilton's private offices were also located on the mezzanine level as were seven sample rooms with Murphy wall beds. The 325 guest rooms were typically small and were painted in colors of pearl gray and cream. The rooms and corridors were carpeted. Most had full baths, and
221-474: The name of the hotel to the White Plaza Hotel . He also undertook improvements totaling $ 150,000, including improvements to the air conditioning system. The 325 rooms were converted to 234, all with private baths. Loudermilk resided at the hotel until his death in 1953. In 1961, the building was sold to Earlee Hotels, but the hotel continued to bear the name White Plaza until 1974. During these years
238-423: The public areas of the hotel for an assortment of vending services. The presence of the druggist, men's shop, barber shop, valet service, beauty shop, coffee shop, tailor, cigar/news stand, telegraph office, dining room and others dovetailed with Hilton's emphasis on service while the rents those services paid supplemented the finances of the operation. Not wanting to tie up capital in land ownership, Hilton introduced
255-414: The rest had half baths. Seventy-five percent of the rooms had south or east exposure for maximum ventilation; no rooms were located on the west. The competition of the luxurious Adolphus and Baker Hotels located just blocks away compelled Hilton to formulate a marketing strategy for attracting a new clientele — "The Average Man" — to whom a moderately priced, modern hotel of handsome design would appeal in
272-484: Was added to the National Register of Historic Places and designated a Dallas Landmark in 1985. It was also designated as a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1988. In 2005, SMI Hotel Group purchased the hotel. In conjunction InterContinental Hotel Group , the parent company of Holiday Inn, began the conversion to the Hotel Indigo Dallas Downtown . During this renovation property's interior underwent
289-401: Was his first hotel to bear the " Hilton " name. Conrad Hilton operated one of the two earliest hotel chains in the state, and went on to become a world leading hotel operator, with an international chain of hotels and resorts. Unlike his earlier hotels, which were bought and renovated but not built by Conrad Hilton himself, the new hotel in Dallas was designed by Hilton from the ground up to be
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