Ybor City Historic District

TheYbor City Historic District(/ˈbɔːr/EE-bor)[3]is aU.S.National Historic LandmarkDistrict(designated as such on December 14, 1990) located inYbor City,Tampa,Florida.The district is bounded by 6th Avenue, 13th Street, 10th Avenue and 22nd Street, East Broadway between 13th and 22nd Streets. Ybor City contains a total of 956 historic buildings, including an unparalleled collection of architecture with Spanish-Cuban influence, as well as historic cigar factory buildings and associated infrastructure. The area was developed by businessmanVicente Martinez Yborbeginning in 1886, and was for a time the world's leading supplier of cigars.[4]

Ybor City Historic District
Western entrance gate into Ybor City
Ybor City Historic District is located in Florida
Ybor City Historic District
Ybor City Historic District is located in the United States
Ybor City Historic District
LocationTampa,Florida
Coordinates27.9615°0′N82.4386°0′W/ 27.962°N 82.439°W/27.962; -82.439
Area369 acres (149 ha)
NRHP referenceNo.74000641[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPAugust 28, 1974
Designated NHLDDecember 14, 1990[2]

TheYbor City Museum State Parkis located in the former Ferlita Bakery building (originally La Joven Francesca) building on 9th Avenue. Tours of the gardens and the "casitas" (small homes of cigar company workers) are provided by a ranger. Exhibits, period photos and a video cover the founding of Ybor City and the cigar making industry.[5]

The Latino Barrio Commission, a city of Tampa-sanctioned committee of neighborhood community and business leaders, architects, and local residents, is charged with "preserving the historic fabric of the District and maintaining its architectural integrity."[6]

District boundaries

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The original Ybor City development covers an area roughly bounded on the north by 21st Avenue, the east by 22nd Street, the west by Nebraska Avenue, and the south by Adamo Drive. In 1974, an area centered on Ybor City's 7th Avenue business district was listed on theNational Register of Historic Places.The landmark district designated in 1990 substantially enlarged this to include much of the surviving architecture of the development. That district consists of three separate sections, separated due to the construction ofInterstate 4and by an urban renewal project in 1965 that resulted in the demolition of 70 acres (28 ha) of historic buildings and the construction of the Nick Nuccio Parkway.[4]

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service.July 9, 2010.
  2. ^Ybor City Historic DistrictArchivedMarch 23, 2009, at theWayback MachineatNational Historic Landmarks ProgramArchivedSeptember 27, 2007, at theWayback Machine
  3. ^"Ybor City".Oxford Dictionaries.Oxford University Press.Archived fromthe originalon March 8, 2013.RetrievedFebruary 7,2013.
  4. ^ab"NHL nomination for Ybor City Historic District".National Park Service.RetrievedJanuary 21,2018.
  5. ^Visit the Museum
  6. ^Latino Barrio Commission at City of Tampa website
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