From the 49th story of the city’s skyscraper with the highest elevation, you’ll get breathtaking views of both downtown Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky. Be sure to bring your camera with you. Carew Tower, which was finished in 1930 and is located in the center of downtown Cincinnati, OH area, has a total of 49 floors. In addition to taking in one of the most breathtaking panoramas the Queen City has to offer, guests to the Observation Deck on the 49th floor can also stop in the gift store to pick up a Cincinnati keepsake. In addition, the Carew Tower is home to 25 different stores, restaurants, and other services, such as the offices and the Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza.

In April of 1994, the building was included in the registry of National Historic Landmarks despite the fact that it is only the second-highest structure in the city. Joseph T. Carew, founder of the Mabley & Carew department store company, which had been operating on the site since 1877, is honored with the naming of this place.

The property includes the Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza, a hotel that was once known as the Omni Netherland Plaza and is regarded as a wonderful illustration of Art Deco architecture. The banquet area of the hotel known as the Hall of Mirrors got its name from the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles. The Historic Hotels of America is the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and the Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza is a participating hotel in that program. Up until the completion of the Great American Tower at Queen City Square in July 2010, Carew Tower had the title of being the tallest structure in the city. The Great American Tower is 86 feet taller than Carew Tower.

The original Carew Building was constructed in the late nineteenth century, and it was replaced by the Carew Tower in the early twenty-first century. The original Carew Building was a nine-story structure built in 1891 in the Romanesque style, and it was designed by Cincinnati architect James W. McLaughlin. The Mabley & Carew department store was located in the Carew Building, which included both a clock tower as well as hydraulic elevators. After J.T. Carew passed away in 1914, the building was eventually acquired by a real estate company that had been established by a prominent entrepreneur in Cincinnati named Thomas Emery. In order to make room for the construction of the new tower, the Carew Building was razed in the summer of 1929.

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