Puneet Varma (Editor)

Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building

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NRHP Reference #
  
95000495

Added to NRHP
  
20 April 1995

Architectural style
  
Art Deco

Architect
  
Harry Hake

Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building

Location
  
209 West Seventh Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, Ohio

Similar
  
Cincinnati Enquirer Building, Cincinnati Times‑Star Building, Isaac M Wise Temple, John A Roebling Suspensi, Cincinnati City Hall

Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building is a registered historic building in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was designed by Harry Hake, and listed in the National Register on April 20, 1995.

The Cincinnati Bell Company opened its building at Seventh and Elm streets in 1931. At that time, it housed the world's longest straight switchboard, with 88 operator positions.

The building was built in such a way as to protect the city's phone network. With a push of a button heavy steel doors will lock and metal covers will spring up over the windows on the lower floors.

On the building's facade representations of rotary telephones are carved into the limestone frieze. Continuing the communication motif, still other reliefs depict a runner, telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell, and nautical flag signals.

References

Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building Wikipedia