Avenue of the Columns

8th Street, more commonly known as the Avenue of the Columns, is an urban street in downtown Columbia, Missouri.[1] It connects the University of Missouri and Francis Quadrangle to the Boone County Court House and the Columbia City Hall. The avenue has long symbolized "town and gown" in this Midwestern college town. Sitting in the center of Francis Quad on the south are the 6 ionic columns of the former Academic Hall, aligned with these on the north are the 4 doric columns of the former Boone County Courthouse.[2] William Jewell, the first mayor of Columbia, is said to be responsible for this decision.[3] The domed Jesse Hall and its corinthian columns are also in the alignment. The street is also home to the Tiger Hotel, the Guitar Building, and the offices of the Columbia Missourian. Civic planning efforts have focused on in-fill development and beautification.[4] In 2014, it became the center of a controversy over the decision to build single-use student housing despite mixed-use and ground floor retail being the focus of community planning.[5] In 5 blocks, the street crosses three National Register of Historic Places districts.

gollark: Equivalent too. This can be proven using maths.
gollark: Also also the same number.
gollark: floor(τ) is also unacceptable and also the same number.
gollark: floor(2π) is not acceptable.
gollark: <@740637832510439477> Ensure it does not spread.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.