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Inside the Tulsa Club

9 Jun

Walking past the Tulsa Club on my way to and from work every day definitely got me wondering what was inside. At one time this was the most prestigious social and athletic club in Tulsa so it had to be nice, right. I’ve heard lore of the wealthiest Tulsans including Waite Phillips indulging in the finer aspects of life at this facility.

So, let’s just say someone invited me inside to take a tour. Two of my colleagues and I entered the building and had a look around. We thoroughly explored the facility from street level to the roof, from racquetball courts to ballrooms from bookkeeping to bathrooms… They really did have had a ton of bathrooms in this place and plenty of graffiti as well. See for yourself at the full photo gallery.

ONEOK Field Design

26 Mar

I am pleased with these drafts for the new downtown baseball field, myself. What do you guys think? It appears to be pretty stylish and in keeping with the BOK arena. Can’t wait to head downtown for some baseball!

By P.J. LASSEK World Staff Writer – from Tulsa World

The exterior design of Tulsa’s downtown ballpark will incorporate brick, zinc and art deco details that reflect the history of the Greenwood District, where it will be built.

The design, created by HOK Sport Venue Event’s office in Kansas City, Mo., was approved by the Tulsa Stadium Trust during a special meeting Wednesday.

The ballpark, to be named ONEOK Field, will be home to the city’s Double-A baseball team, the Tulsa Drillers. During the team’s off-season, the stadium will have a variety of other events.

The $60 million project includes construction of a $39.2 million multipurpose stadium and acquisition of surrounding land for mixed-use redevelopment. The stadium construction is scheduled to be complete in time for the Drillers’ 2010 baseball season.

The Drillers’ owner, Chuck Lamson, is excited about the exterior design, which he said was the product of a “good, thoughtful process.”

Even though the appearance strays from the tradition of all-brick ballparks, “it’s unique with a warm and inviting feel,” he said.

The use of brick in the design “gives homage to the architect of the Greenwood and Brady districts, and having the zinc panels creates the uniqueness of a new structure,” he said.

An initial design concept released last year was discarded. It resembled Frank Lloyd Wright’s architecture style with flat roofs, horizontal lines and stone, steel and glass construction material.

(more…)

Where is this Modern?

27 Feb

Okay, I dug a little deeper for this weeks installment of “Where is this modern”. This is a gem I spotted off the beaten path. Who can tell me where this beaut is located? Or better yet, who knows anything about this place? Comment away!

Tulsa Club Building For Sale

25 Feb

From Tulsa World – By P.J. LASSEK World Staff Writer

The owner of the vacant Tulsa Club building is looking for a buyer who will rehabilitate the downtown nuisance into a historically significant piece of property, a local broker said Tuesday.

Cecilia and Will Wilkins of W3 Real Estate were hired to market the building for Carl Morony of California.

Morony also owns the Sinclair Building at the southeast corner of Fifth and Main streets.

The Wilkinses also are marketing that building.

The Tulsa Club, 115 E. Fifth St., is a Bruce Goff-designed building that is structurally sound but needs a lot of work, Will Wilkins told the Tulsa World.

The building is tied up in litigation that includes city code violations, a city lien for unpaid downtown assessment fees and unrelated judgments to other parties.

Morony tried to redevelop the building into lofts by vying for Vision 2025 funds, but he lost out to another developer, Wilkins said.

“Now that the downtown is going through a revitalization, this is an opportune time to find a developer that can find a unique use for the building, work with the Historical Preservation Commission and rehabilitate it,” he said.

When Morony bought the building at a tax sale, it had been gutted and was in poor condition, Wilkins said. No work has been done on it since.

“Carl made an investment so that sometime down the line when downtown Tulsa revitalized, he would be able to capitalize on that investment,” Wilkins said.

The Tulsa Club was one of 60 vacant buildings with code violations that the city targeted in 2007.

Vacant for more than a decade, the building has fire, electrical and plumbing code violations as well as safety and health issues.

Wilkins said Morony’s attempt to get Vision 2025 funds for renovations “speaks volumes to what he wants to see the building become.”

“It certainly hasn’t worked out that way, and we hate that it has gotten to the point that it has,” he said. “But now Cecilia and I want to facilitate action that makes something good happen for the building and the downtown area.”

Morony’s lawyer, Jasen Corns, said the city knows that the property is for sale.

“If the city genuinely wanted the building improved and rehabilitated, it would stay out of the owner’s business in his efforts to sell it,” he said.

“We believe certain city officials already have an end game in mind for this property and they are basically just manipulating the process to get the result they want.”

The city declared the property a public nuisance in November 2007 and ordered that its problems be corrected, with civil penalties of $1,000 a day for noncompliance.

The city has filed for a foreclosure on the property for an unpaid $331,815 default judgment for failure to remediate the building-code issues.

Morony has asked a judge to vacate that judgment. If the judge rules in favor of Morony or if he pays the judgment, the foreclosure action will dissolve.

The city also placed a lien on the property for 10 years of unpaid assessment fees linked to the Business Improvement District. The total owed is about $22,000.

Two other judgments against the property by separate parties total about $50,000.

Wilkins said he is actively showing the property to several prospective buyers, both locally and out of state, and some have expressed serious interest.

All are aware of the legal status of the property, he said.

The Osborn Ministry Building

21 Feb

The Osborn ministry building will be razed to make way for I-44. Story from Tulsa World.

The empty T.L. Osborn ministry building at 1400 E. Skelly Drive will soon be demolished as part of the Interstate 44 widening project. MICHAEL WYKE/Tulsa World

By BILL SHERMAN World Religion Writer

A piece of Tulsa’s spiritual heritage soon will be gone.

Bids were opened Thursday for the demolition of the T.L. Osborn ministry building at 1400 E. Skelly Drive to make way for the widening of Interstate 44.The 108,000-square-foot building housed the Osborn ministries from 1963 until October. In its later years, it also was the home of Victory Bible Institute, a ministry of Victory Christian Church.

Many Tulsans in the 1970s and early 1980s visited the building’s extensive museum of art and cultural artifacts from around the world, collected by ministry founder T.L. Osborn and his wife, the late Daisy Osborn, on their missionary travels.

Sam Osborn, general manager of the ministry and a nephew of T.L. Osborn, said his uncle pioneered mass evangelism crusades in Africa, Asia, South America and Europe that drew crowds of several hundred thousand people to huge outdoor rallies. At that time, it was said of Osborn that he had preached in person to more people than anyone else in the history of Christianity, Sam Osborn said. Since then, others have conducted similar crusades.

The World Museum Art Center occupied 50,000 square feet of the building, with more than 5,000 pieces from more than 100 nations. The collection included more than 250 Renaissance bronze sculptures, about 100 marble sculptures and more than 150 old masters paintings, including one that was 22 feet tall.

Three shrunken human heads from South America, part of the primitive art collection, were a hit with the many school children who toured the museum.

When the ministry decided to close the museum in the early 1980s, Christie’s of New York and London was brought in to auction off the finer pieces. Sam Osborn worked with the world-famous auction house.

“They said they couldn’t believe this collection existed west of the Mississippi,” he said.

The original building was built debt-free in 1962 and 1963 when 140 people each gave $1,000 for the project.

In 1963, the ministry moved from 1029 N. Utica Ave. to the new building, which was later expanded several times.

In 1994, the Osborns gave the building to Victory Christian Center, which used it for Victory Bible Institute and provided space for the Osborn ministry to continue there.

In early fall the Osborn ministry moved to new headquarters at 555 S. Memorial Drive, the former home of Vatterott College, and Victory Bible Institute moved to a building at 81st Street and Delaware Avenue, where it was formerly located.

Kenna Mitchell of the Oklahoma Department of Transportation said a contract for the demolition likely will be approved in March, and the work could begin in a few months.

Harvard Tower / Spirit Bank

11 Feb

All right, here is another pic I recently took. First off, who knows what building this is? Additionally, can anyone share anything interesting about when it was constructed, who built it, etc? Comment away.