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John Eisenmann : ウィキペディア英語版
John Eisenmann

John Eisenmann (March 26, 1851 – January 6, 1924), was an architect in Cleveland, Ohio. As part of Eisenmann & Smith he designed the Cleveland Arcade in downtown Cleveland. He also designed Case Western University's Main building and was the school's first professor of civil engineering. He pioneered structural steel construction in the United States and is credited with co-designing Cleveland's Arcade, "the first commercial building in the state designated an historic landmark in architecture."〔() From a Case Western University website that no longer exists〕 Eisenmann is also credited with designing the flag of Ohio in 1902.〔http://www.annin.com/products/flag_us_ohio.asp Flags of the Fifty States - Ohio〕〔(Sarah's Scrapbook )〕
==Arcade==
The arcade was erected in 1890, at a cost of $867,000.〔 It opened on Memorial Day (May 31, 1890)〔 and is an example of Victorian architecture, consisting of two nine-story buildings joined by a five-story arcade. It includes a glass skylight spanning 300 feet (91 m) along the four balconies.〔(Arcade ), ''Encyclopedia of Cleveland History'', Case Western Reserve University, 10 July 1997.〕
The arcade is identified as the first indoor shopping mall in the United States. and was built by Detroit Bridge Co., run by Stephen V. Harkness.〔 It is one of the few remaining arcades of its kind in the United States. Modeled after the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II located in Milan,〔 the Arcade comprises two nine-story towers with a skylight, 100 feet (30 m) high, made of 1,800 panes of glass spanning over 300 feet (91 m). The construction was financed by John D. Rockefeller, Marcus Hanna, Charles F. Brush and several other wealthy Clevelanders of the day.〔 The Arcade was modified in 1939, with remodeling of the Euclid Avenue entrance and some structural supports added.
The Arcade is a cross between a lighted court and a commercial shopping street, composed of three structures: two nine-story office buildings facing out to Euclid and Superior Avenues, connected via the five-story iron-and-glass enclosed arcade.〔 The Richardsonian arched entrance along Superior Avenue is original but the Euclid Avenue front was remodeled in 1939〔 by the firm of Walker and Weeks.
Vertical lines of the columns rise nearly 100 feet (33 m) to the glass roof and create a spacious domed interior.〔
In 2001, the Hyatt corporation redeveloped the Arcade into Cleveland's first Hyatt Regency hotel. The Hyatt Regency occupies the two towers and the top three floors of the atrium area. The two lower floors of the atrium area remain open to the public with retail merchants and a food court. In addition, the Hyatt's lobby and offices are located near the Superior Avenue entrance.

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