Dallas, TX Photos

Dallas is a city of skyscrapers. It is remembered as the city of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Dallas is the twin city of Fort Worth.

See also: Captions List for Dallas & Fort Worth, Texas, Fort Worth, TX
Click photo to enlarge.
Downtown skyline. Dallas, TX

Reunion Tower & Hyatt Regency Reunion Hotel (1978). Dallas, TX. Architect: Welton Becket & Assoc. + Culpepper, McAuliffe & Meaders.

George Bannerman Dealey Statue & Reunion Tower. Dallas, TX

Dealey Statue faces Old Red Courthouse. Dallas, TX

Old Red Courthouse (1890) (on Dealey Plaza). Dallas, TX
Style: Richardsonian Romanesque. Architect: M.A. Orlopp.

Old Red Courthouse tower detail. Dallas, TX

Criminal Courts Building (1890s) (on Dealey Plaza). Dallas, TX
Architect: H.A. Overbeck.

Old Texas School Book Depository from where the shot which killed President John F. Kennedy was fired (sixth floor at right corner). Dallas, TX

Old Texas School Book Depository now the County Administration Building & site of the Sixth Floor Museum about the JFK assassination. Dallas, TX

Renaissance Tower & Bank of America Plaza (1985) (901 Main Street) 72 floors. Dallas, TX
Architect: JPJ Architects.

John F. Kennedy Memorial (1970) (Market at Commerce Streets) in front of Bank of America Plaza. Dallas, TX
Architect: Philip Johnson.

John F. Kennedy Memorial & building which houses Conspiracy Museum. Dallas, TX

Former Kansas Texas Railway Building (110 S Market). Dallas, TX

Mural showing Indians with arms extended to nature on back of eagle. Dallas, TX

Red sculpture at base of Bank of America Plaza. Dallas, TX

Fountain Place (1985) (1445 Ross Avenue at Field) 62 floors. Dallas, TX
Architect: Pei Cobb Freed & Partners.

Fountain Place & black glass pyramid at base of Renaissance Tower. Dallas, TX

Bank of America Plaza at night with green lights. Dallas, TX

Cupola of older building against windows of Bank One Center. Dallas, TX

Bank One Center (1987) (1717 Main Street) 60 floors to left of 1700 Pacific Avenue. Dallas, TX. Architect: HKS Inc. + Johnson/Burgee Architects.

1700 Pacific Avenue (1983) 50 floors + Bank One Center. Dallas, TX
Architect: WZMH Architects.

Elm Place (1964), Renaissance Tower (1974) & Fidelity Union Tower (1959) from Thanks-Giving Square. Dallas, TX

Thanksgiving Tower (1982) (1601 Elm St. on Thanks-Giving Square) 50 floors. Dallas, TX
Architect: HKS Inc.

Republic Center Tower I (1954) (300 North Ervay Street) 36 floors over Chapel of Thanksgiving. Dallas, TX
Architect: Harrison & Abramovitz.

Energy Plaza (1983) (1601 Bryan Street) 49 floors over Chapel of Thanksgiving. Dallas, TX
Architect: I.M. Pei & Partners.

Chapel of Thanksgiving spiral tower with Glory stained-glass window by Gabriel Loire. Dallas, TX

Morton H. Myerson Symphony Center (1989) (2301 Flora Street). Dallas, TX. Architect: I.M. Pei & Partners.

Myerson Symphony Center window array. Dallas, TX

JP Morgan Chase Tower (1987) (2200 Ross Avenue) 55 floors. Dallas, TX
Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.

JP Morgan Chase Tower over trellises of Cancer Survivors Plaza. Dallas, TX

JP Morgan Chase Tower ground level details. Dallas, TX

The Majestic Theater (1921) (1925 Elm St.). Dallas, TX
Architect: John Eberson.

Wilson Building (1904) (1623 Main) former Titche-Goettinger Department Store now lofts. Dallas, TX
Style: Second Empire. Architect: Sanguinet & Staats.

Heritage school building on Pearl Street. Dallas, TX

Restaurant decorated with whimsies & hubcaps. Dallas, TX

The Crescent complex (1985) (on McKinney Ave.). Dallas, TX. Architect: Johnson/Burgee Architects.

MATA Heritage streetcar (1925) acquired from Australia on McKinney Ave. Dallas, TX

United States of America Building. Dallas, TX

DART light rail system & highrises. Dallas, TX

DART light rail system in downtown. Dallas, TX

Shelters at DART transit mall Pearl Station. Dallas, TX

Cancer Survivors Plaza with Positive Mental Attitude Walk sculpture by Victor Salmones & aluminum trellises on Bryan Street. Dallas, TX


All photos on this page are originals by & copyrighted by Jim Steinhart.
All rights reserved. Permission required to use.