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・ Joseph Fleck
・ Joseph Fleming
・ Joseph Fleming (politician)
・ Joseph Fletcher
・ Joseph Fletcher (disambiguation)
・ Joseph Fletcher (historian)
・ Joseph Fletcher Anderson, Jr.
・ Joseph Fleuriau d'Armenonville
・ Joseph Flint
・ Joseph Flintoft Berry
・ Joseph Flood
・ Joseph Flores
・ Joseph Flores (Guamanian politician)
・ Joseph Flores (Maltese politician)
・ Joseph Florimond Loubat
Joseph Floyd Manor
・ Joseph Fluerty
・ Joseph Fogerty
・ Joseph Fogerty & Son
・ Joseph Fogerty Sr.
・ Joseph Fok
・ Joseph Foley
・ Joseph Fonclause
・ Joseph Fontaine
・ Joseph Fontanet
・ Joseph Fontenrose
・ Joseph Force Crater
・ Joseph Ford (physicist)
・ Joseph Forlenze
・ Joseph Fornance


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Joseph Floyd Manor : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Floyd Manor

The Joseph Floyd Manor is a retirement home in the upper peninsula area of Charleston, South Carolina. The building is located at the northwest corner of Mt. Pleasant St. and King St. The 12-story building was originally known as the Darlington Apartments and was designed by William G. Lyles, Bissett, Carlisle & Wolff of Columbia, South Carolina. The apartments cost $1,626,000 when it was built, starting in 1950. The ground floor was supposed to have space for commercial spaces, and the second floor was to have professional offices such as lawyers or doctors along with 156 apartments. Rent for an apartment ranged from $75 per month for a one-bedroom efficiency to $175 a month for one of three three-bedroom penthouse apartments. The property had been bought by Mr. Leonard D. Long in 1933 when it housed a tent community and there were only two nearby houses. Immediately before the construction began in January 1950, the site was home to a WWII-era nightclub known as the Windmill which was being used as a grocery store. The apartments were meant to cater to single men and women and retirees.
Construction began in January 1950.
In 1979, the Charleston County Housing and Redevelopment Authority tried to rework the building into apartments for the elderly with the assistance of $2.5 million from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The lowest bid received for the work, however, was $3.6 million. At the time, the chairman of the Authority was Joseph H. Floyd.
The work was eventually carried out, and the newly christened Joseph Floyd Manor reopened in March 1981 following a renovation. After the work, the first floor included a mix of uses; the second floor was for handicapped residents; and the upper floors were for the elderly. The building, named for chairman of the Authority board, reopened in March 1981.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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