Parker Building

Parker Building, Parker's Building or Parker's Buildings (or variations with Block or Plant or Complex) may refer to;

in Canada
  • Parker Building, a building at Laurentian University in Toronto, which houses the campus radio station, CKLU-FM
in the United Kingdom
  • Parker's Buildings, Chester, a Grade II listed building in Chester, UK

in the United States (by state then city or town)

  • Imperial Granum-Joseph Parker Buildings, New Haven, Connecticut, NRHP-listed
  • Parker Metal Decoration Company Plant, Baltimore, Maryland, NRHP-listed
  • Parker Mill Complex, Ann Arbor, Michigan, listed on the NRHP in Washtenaw County, Michigan
  • Parker and Dunstan Hardware/Dr. E. D. Lewis Building, Otisville, Michigan, listed on the NRHP in Genesee County, Michigan
  • Parker Building (Brainerd, Minnesota), NRHP-listed, in Crow Wing County
  • Parker's Store, Goffstown, New Hampshire, listed on the NRHP in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire
  • Parker Building (New York City), a 12 storey office and loft building destroyed by fire in 1909
  • Parker Masonic Hall, Parker, South Dakota, NRHP-listed, in Turner County
  • Parker Lumber Company Complex, Bryan, Texas, listed on the NRHP in Brazos County, Texas
  • Parker and Weeter Block, Price, Utah, listed on the NRHP in Carbon County, Utah

Read more about Parker Building:  See Also

Famous quotes containing the words parker and/or building:

    Across Parker Avenue from the fort is the Site of the Old Gallows, where 83 men “stood on nothin’, a-lookin’ up a rope.” The platform had a trap wide enought to “accommodate” 12 men, but half that number was the highest ever reached. On two occasions six miscreants were executed. There were several groups of five, some quartets and trios.
    —Administration in the State of Arka, U.S. public relief program. Arkansas: A Guide to the State (The WPA Guide to Arkansas)

    People do not know the natural infirmity of their mind: it does nothing but ferret and quest, and keeps incessantly whirling around, building up and becoming entangled in its own work, like our silkworms, and is suffocated in it: a mouse in a pitch barrel.
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)