Opera House and Yates Bookshop Building explained

Opera House and Yates Bookshop Building
Coordinates:38.05°N -84.4989°W
Built:,
Architect:Cobb,Oscar; unknown
Architecture:Italianate, Gothic Revival
Added:June 11, 1975
Refnum:75000752

The Opera House and Yates Bookshop Building in Lexington, Kentucky, are adjacent buildings listed together on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, and they are contributing resources in the North Broadway-Short Street Historic District.

The 3-story Lexington Opera House was designed by Oscar Cobb and constructed by Herman L. Rowe in 1886 after a fire earlier that year destroyed Lexington's previous opera house. The Opera House has been described either as Gothic Revival or Queen Anne in its facade. Above the third floor, the facade features a prominent sheet iron relief decoration with the appearance of cut stone.[1]

The 3-story Yates Bookshop Building was constructed about two years after an 1873 fire destroyed the Broadway Hotel. The Italianate building was part of a row of buildings completed after the fire, one of only a few of the buildings to survive urban renewal in the 20th century.[1]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=75000752}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Opera House and Yates Bookshop Building ]. National Park Service. Mrs. James Park, Jr. . March 20, 1975 . May 4, 2019. With