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Drake Hotel (Philadelphia)


FieldValue
nameDrake Hotel
nrhp_typenrhp
designated_other1_namePhiladelphia Register of Historic Places
designated_other1_dateOctober 6, 1977
designated_other1_abbrPRHP
designated_other1_linkPhiladelphia Register of Historic Places
designated_other1_color#A8BDEC
imageDrake Hotel Philly.JPG
captionDrank Hotel in February 2010
location1512-1514 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
coordinates
locmapinPhiladelphia#Pennsylvania#USA
built1928
builderMurphy, Quigley
architectRitter & Shay,
architectureArt Deco, Spanish Baroque
addedSeptember 18, 1978
refnum78002446

Eric Fisher Wood The Drake Hotel, a historic 375-foot-tall, 33-story luxury hotel located at 1512–1514 Spruce Street at the corner of S. Hicks Street between S. 15th and S. 16th Streets in the Rittenhouse Square neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was built in 1928–29 by the Murphy, Quigley Company and was designed by the architectural firm of Ritter and Shay in the Art Deco style with Spanish Baroque terra cotta ornamentation on themes surrounding Sir Francis Drake, including "dolphins, shells, sailing vessels and globes." The building is topped by a terra cotta dome.

The building was originally proposed to be 28-stories, and the demolition work took place in April 1928. The first steel column was placed on site on September 1, 1928 and just four months later stunt reporter Vivian Shirley went to the top of the unfinished building on January 29, 1929. It was originally scheduled to open in June 1929, but the developers stated it was ready for occupancy on September 11, 1929.

The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 18, 1978. It was added to the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places on October 6, 1977. In 1998, the building was extensively renovated and converted to condominiums as "The Drake".

In 2016, the building's ballroom was renovated into a two-theater complex by InterAct Theatre Company, who operate the space and share it with PlayPenn, Inis Nua Theatre, Simpatico, and Azuka Theatre. The Proscenium has 121 seats, while the Louis Bluver Theatre is a black box space with a capacity of 65-80 people.

References

Notes

References

  1. {{NRISref. 2009a
  2. {{cite philarch, p.106
  3. (August 2015). "PRHP: List of properties with OPA-compliant addresses". Philadelphia Historical Commission.
  4. Richard J. Webster. (October 1977). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Pennsylvania SP Drake Hotel". National Archives and Records Administration.
  5. Salisbury, Stephan. (19 January 2016). "Drake Center ready to stage latest act of Philadelphia's theater romance". Philadelphia Inquirer.
  6. . (n.d.). ["Theatre Rentals"](https://www.interacttheatre.org/theatre-rentals).
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