Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4644007> ?p ?o }
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- Q4644007 subject Q8320152.
- Q4644007 subject Q8495887.
- Q4644007 subject Q8549049.
- Q4644007 subject Q8768062.
- Q4644007 subject Q8883374.
- Q4644007 abstract "The 7th District Police Station, or Maxwell Street Station in Chicago, Illinois, was built in 1888 in response to the need for increased police presence in "Bloody Maxwell", known colloquially as "the Wickedest Police District in the World." The neighborhood, a changing melting pot of Irish, German, Italian and European Jewish immigrants, grew mightily in the years following the Chicago Fire of 1871. The housing and sanitation situation in the district was substandard, and the residents poor. Criminal activity flourished. The Romanesque style station is architecturally significant as an example of pre-1945 police stations in Chicago. It was designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke and Franklin Pierce Burnham. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. The Chicago Police Department vacated the station in 1998. After extensive renovation, the red brick and limestone building became the home of the University of Illinois at Chicago Police Department. The renovations were done in a manner designed to uphold the historic significance of the building's architecture. "The building’s original windows were sent to a company in Kankakee for restoration, the masonry cleaned and repaired, the roof replaced, and parapets at the top of the station rebuilt using custom-made bricks, the exact texture and color of the originals." In order to be handicap-accessible, the renovations included constructing a new street-level main entrance where the vehicle entrance had been, to the east of the original front doors and their six steps.The building is known in popular culture because the outside was used as the picture of the precinct house in the opening and closing credits, and establishing shots of the iconic television series, Hill Street Blues. It is also used as the exterior of the precinct house in the television series Chicago PD.".
- Q4644007 added "1996-05-02".
- Q4644007 architect Q8022225.
- Q4644007 location Q1297.
- Q4644007 nrhpReferenceNumber "96000515".
- Q4644007 thumbnail Precinct.jpg?width=300.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q1247241.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q1297.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q13218686.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q1914334.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q3719.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q5491744.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q744373.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q8022225.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q8320152.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q8495887.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q8549049.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q8768062.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q8883374.
- Q4644007 wikiPageWikiLink Q955764.
- Q4644007 yearOfConstruction "1888".
- Q4644007 added "1996-05-02".
- Q4644007 architect "Edbrooke, Willoughby James; Burnham, Franklin Pierce".
- Q4644007 location "949".
- Q4644007 name "7".
- Q4644007 refnum "96000515".
- Q4644007 point "41.864444444444445 -87.65055555555556".
- Q4644007 type LandmarksOrHistoricalBuildings.
- Q4644007 type Place.
- Q4644007 type HistoricPlace.
- Q4644007 type Location.
- Q4644007 type Place.
- Q4644007 type Thing.
- Q4644007 type SpatialThing.
- Q4644007 comment "The 7th District Police Station, or Maxwell Street Station in Chicago, Illinois, was built in 1888 in response to the need for increased police presence in "Bloody Maxwell", known colloquially as "the Wickedest Police District in the World." The neighborhood, a changing melting pot of Irish, German, Italian and European Jewish immigrants, grew mightily in the years following the Chicago Fire of 1871. The housing and sanitation situation in the district was substandard, and the residents poor.".
- Q4644007 label "7th District Police Station".
- Q4644007 lat "41.864444444444445".
- Q4644007 long "-87.65055555555556".
- Q4644007 depiction Precinct.jpg.
- Q4644007 name "7th District Police Station".