Sape A. Zylstra Collection of Tampa Photographs
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Creation Date
January 1980
Time Period
circa 1980s-1990s
Abstract
Henry Flagler had this built in 1891 during the first building boom in Tampa. Flagler chose as architect J. A. Wood. Flagler had already built the Ponce de Leon Hotel in St. Augustine. The Tampa Bay Hotel was meant to surpass everything else in exotic luxury. The Alhambra was thought to be inspiration for it. The most prominent motif is that of the ogee or horseshoe arch. It is seen over window and door openings, in the trellis trim for verandas, and in the turrets which, whether round or square in plan, are ogee in section. Now part of the University of Tampa, the monolithic, polished stone columns and carved wooden balustrades are still in place, but much else in the interior was changed when the hotel was renovated for use as a university. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This is the main entrance.
Keywords
Hotels, Minarets, Henry Morrison Flagler (1830-1913), Tampa Bay Hotel (Tampa Fla.)
Extent
1 color slide
Geographic Location
Hillsborough County (Fla.); Tampa (Fla.)
Physical Collection
Box
1
Media Type
Color slides
Note
Title supplied by cataloger. Description supplied by Sape A. Zylstra.
Identifier
Z03-A022
Recommended Citation
Zylstra, Sape A., "Tampa Bay Hotel, 401 West Kennedy Boulevard, Tampa, Florida, Main Entrance" (1980). Sape A. Zylstra Collection of Tampa Photographs. Image 22.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/zylstra/22
Keywords
Hotels, Minarets, Henry Morrison Flagler (1830-1913), Tampa Bay Hotel (Tampa Fla.)