Restoration planned for major St. Louis building
A historic building in downtown St. Louis, known for its elaborate design that includes red brick and teal-colored ground floors, is slated for renovation.
Restoration St. Louis has submitted a letter of their intent to buy the Chemical Building, located on Olive Street, and restore it. The building, which was designed in 1896 by Henry Ives Cobb, is now on the National Register of Historic Places. Located adjacent to the Hotel Saint Louis, which Restoration St. Louis recently renovated, the structure is presently vacant. The group now plans to expand the hotel into the Chemical Building as part of the project, and expects to start work, which should take about a year, sometime this fall.
When complete, the Chemical Building will add 84 guestrooms to the hotel, and will also offer 72 luxury housing units, as well as a rooftop bar, restaurant, and ballroom. A pedestrian walkway at street level will connect the hotel with the Chemical Building. Developers who work on projects like this can use brochure printing to create pamphlets advertising a building, and illustrating the amenities it offers to travelers and to potential tenants.
Amy and Amrit Gill are the team behind Restoration St. Louis. They transformed the former Union Trust Building into today's Hotel St. Louis, which has 140 rooms, a rooftop bar, and the Union 30 restaurant.
Restoration St. Louis has submitted a letter of their intent to buy the Chemical Building, located on Olive Street, and restore it. The building, which was designed in 1896 by Henry Ives Cobb, is now on the National Register of Historic Places. Located adjacent to the Hotel Saint Louis, which Restoration St. Louis recently renovated, the structure is presently vacant. The group now plans to expand the hotel into the Chemical Building as part of the project, and expects to start work, which should take about a year, sometime this fall.
When complete, the Chemical Building will add 84 guestrooms to the hotel, and will also offer 72 luxury housing units, as well as a rooftop bar, restaurant, and ballroom. A pedestrian walkway at street level will connect the hotel with the Chemical Building. Developers who work on projects like this can use brochure printing to create pamphlets advertising a building, and illustrating the amenities it offers to travelers and to potential tenants.
Amy and Amrit Gill are the team behind Restoration St. Louis. They transformed the former Union Trust Building into today's Hotel St. Louis, which has 140 rooms, a rooftop bar, and the Union 30 restaurant.