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Kahl Building

Kahl Building
Kahl Building (Davenport, Iowa).JPG
Kahl Building is located in Iowa
Kahl Building
Kahl Building is located in the US
Kahl Building
Location 326 W. 3rd St.
Davenport, Iowa
Coordinates 41°31′21″N 90°34′41″W / 41.52250°N 90.57806°W / 41.52250; -90.57806Coordinates: 41°31′21″N 90°34′41″W / 41.52250°N 90.57806°W / 41.52250; -90.57806
Area 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built 1920
Architect Arthur Ebeling
Architectural style Early Commercial
MPS Davenport MRA
NRHP Reference # 83002456
Added to NRHP July 07, 1983

The Kahl Building, also known as Kahl Education Center, is an historic building located in Downtown Davenport, Iowa, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. The building also includes the Capitol Theatre.

The Kahl Building is ten-stories tall and rises 146 feet (45 m) above the ground. It was designed by Davenport architect Arthur Ebeling who used as inspiration the works of Chicago architects William Holabird, John Root and Louis Sullivan. In fact Sullivan’s Wainwright Building in St. Louis is considered a model after which the Kahl Building was designed. Sullivan's influence can be seen in the more elaborate ornamentation on the lower floors while the upper floors are relatively plain. Their decoration is confined to recessed spandrel panels. The building is capped with a staccato pairing of round-arch windows and an elaborate cornice.

In 1920, the building was constructed by Henry Kahl and Walsh-Kahl Construction for $1.5 million. It is composed of steel frame construction with stone and decorative terra cotta facing materials. The building's sense of height is highlighted by recessing the spandrel panels between the floors and behind the vertical piers. It is considered an "exceptional example of the influence of the Chicago School on commercial architecture." Historically, the building has contained 184 office suites, several retail shops, a restaurant and the Capital Theater.

In 1994 the family of Davenport Banker V.O. Figge and his wife Elizabeth, who was Henry Kahl's daughter, donated the building to the Scott Community College Foundation, which now uses it for academic purposes. The Eastern Iowa Community Colleges announced in August 2014 their intention to leave the Kahl Building and relocate to a new campus that will be created in the former First Federal Bank and First Midwest Bank buildings on West Third Street between Brady and Main streets. The $50 million project includes renovating the Kahl Building into 80 market-rate apartments.


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