Hotel Roosevelt (Jacksonville)
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The Carling, formerly known as the Carling Hotel and Hotel Roosevelt, is a historic building in Jacksonville, Florida, United States built in 1925. It is located at 31 West Adams Street in Downtown Jacksonville. As its former names indicates it was originally a hotel, and was used for that purpose until 1964; it currently serves as a residential building.


Construction

The 13-story building originally contained 335 rooms and was designed by noted New York City architects ''Thompson, Holmes & Converse'' in 1925 and held in Italian Renaissance style. A newspaper story depicted it as "300 rooms with bath, running ice water, fans and the latest equipment in the rooms. The three lower stories are faced with Indiana limestone above which is a shaft of red brick. The upper stories are trimmed with terra-cotta, and surmounted by a balustrade with limestone coping. The building is of completely fireproof construction."Wood, Wayne & Davis, Judy
''Jacksonville's Architectural Heritage''
1989, . Retrieved December 11, 2009.
When it opened on September 1, 1926, it was one of Jacksonville's finest hotels.Marbut, Max
"The story behind one of Downtown’s historic buildings: The Carling"
''Jacksonville Daily Record'', December 10, 2009.
Placement of the building was unusual at the time because it was situated in the middle of a block, rather than on a corner. It was constructed and managed by Atlanta's Dinkler Hotel Company, which owned and operated nearly two dozen upscale hotels in the southeastern United States. The facility was named after Carling L. Dinkler, who claimed to be the youngest hotel executive in the U.S.


History

The facility changed its name to the Hotel Roosevelt in 1936 and it was a downtown landmark for over a quarter century. A two-story addition was constructed in 1937 at the rear of the building which permits access from Monroe Street. It was the site of the catastrophic Hotel Roosevelt fire in late December 1963, which claimed 22 lives and caused in excess of $350,000 in damage, forcing the hotel to close in 1964. After being vacant for nearly 20 years, the structure was turned into apartments for retirees called ''Jacksonville Regency House'', but that operation ended in 1989. On February 28, 1991, the site was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, but the building remained shuttered for almost 14 years. Little or no work was performed on the building's major components for almost 40 years; the structure's infrastructure was outdated with leaks and rot throughout.


Current use

Jacksonville developer Vestcor began a historic preservation of the Carling in 2003 after obtaining a $16.5 million, 1.4% interest, 20-year loan and $5 million in grants, both from the city of Jacksonville. Hunt, David
"Downtown housing developer asks Jacksonville for help"
Florida Times-Union, December 30, 2009
The company restored many architectural features which included Palladian windows, terrazzo floors, and the dual grand marble staircasesVestcor Companies
Carling Apartments
. Retrieved December 11, 2009.
leading from the lobby to what was the ballroom on the second level. Elevators, HVAC, electrical, plumbing and other infrastructure was modernized and a 237-space parking garage was constructed adjacent to the Carling. The ballroom was converted into a large community club room, a fitness center and a media room. Modern amenities were added while respecting the historic integrity of the structure. The building was renamed The Carling, and its 100 apartments were opened in July 2005 after $29 million and 20 months of construction.Witkowski, Rachel

''Jacksonville Business Journal'', April 7, 2006
Vestor began leasing space in the Carling's commercial arcade in October 2007. Since then, a gallery known as "The Art Center Cooperative, Inc." and a barber shop opened in the complex. In late December 2009, Vestcor requested a modification to their loan terms, citing three years of operating losses on the Carling and their other renovated building,
11 East Forsyth 11 East Forsyth, formerly known as the Lynch Building and the American Heritage Life Building, is a historic structure in Jacksonville, Florida. Originally developed by Stephen Andrew Lynch, as its current name suggests, it is located at 11 East Fo ...
. The company asked for three years of interest-only payments plus low interest loans to potential tenants for the mostly empty commercial space in their buildings. Three months later, the city approved the plan for principal deferral but took no action on tenant loans.Bauerlein, David
"Jacksonville finds it too costly to pay business’s employee parking as incentive"
Florida Times-Union, March 11, 2010


See also

* Architecture of Jacksonville * List of tallest buildings in Jacksonville


References


External links

*
Photos from 2008

Photo of Barber Shop
via Flickr
Location in Jacksonville
via Google Maps
The Art Center Cooperative, Inc.


a
National Register of Historic Places
{{DEFAULTSORT:Carling, The Hotel buildings completed in 1925 History of Jacksonville, Florida Defunct hotels in Florida National Register of Historic Places in Jacksonville, Florida Residential skyscrapers in Jacksonville, Florida Dinkler hotels Northbank, Jacksonville 1925 establishments in Florida Laura Street Hotels in Jacksonville