'LIGGETT PARK' / LIGGETT OFFICE AND RESEARCH BUILDINGS

Looking northeast from Duke and Main Sts., 1890s. The tower of the Fire Station #2 is visible along West Main St.
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection)
The block currently encircled by North Duke, West Main, Morgan, and Fuller Sts. originally held what appears to have been a tobacco field and wood frame structures of the early Duke plant. With the construction/expansion of the brick warehouses, these structures were cleared, and the block became a park of sorts. Although I haven't seen an official name for this park, it was frequented by Liggett employees
Looking northwest, 1920s. The park area is visible between the businesses on the west side of North Duke St. and the Liggett buildings.
(Courtesy Durham County Library / North Carolina Collection)
Looking northwest, 1930s.
(Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection)
Looking north across West Main St. from the south side of the street towards the Toms and Hicks warehouses.
(Courtesy University of North Carolina Library)
It remained this way until 1946 - when the Liggett office building, located across the street, was moved to this side of the street to make way for the New Cigarette Factory. Whether it was done for publicity or not, the folks at Liggett made it a point that their workers kept working in the building as it moved.
Looking east, 06.28.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Looking west-southwest, 06.28.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Looking south, 06.28.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Looking southeast, 06.28.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Looking southwest, 06.28.46
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
(So the next time a smug associate tells you that such-and-such building "can't be moved because it's brick", you know better.)
Remaking the back door as the front door ~1946.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
With the move of the office building, the remainder of the site was converted to surface parking.
Looking northeast from South Duke and West main, 1946-7
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Looking northeast, 1948.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
But within a few years, Liggett had constructed a research laboratory on the northeast corner of Duke and Main Sts., which they expanded north along Duke St. over a few years time.
Looking northeast, 1950s
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Looking northwest, 1950s.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Duke and Main Sts. (as these men are quite posed-ly admiring) with the Liggett office building in the background, 07.28.54.
(Courtesy The Herald-Sun Newspaper)
Even after Liggett pulled out of town, slowly over a few decades, the research building remained active with the company's Vector Research branch. These building was acquired along with the remainder of the complex by Blue Devil Ventures for redevelopment.
They've recently completed renovation of the old office building, which looks nicely redone.
The research building and office building from Duke and Main Sts., 04.08.08
The itinerant office building, 4.08.08
They also recently built a parking garage at the 'back' corner of the block - the corner of Fuller and Morgan. They've done a good job with it, as it remains reasonably unobtrusive from Main St., despite its size. I also have to give my kudos for getting in some first floor (future) retail office space. Although I would have liked to have seen more of it along the Morgan St. frontage, I'll take what I can get.
Looking southwest from Morgan and Fuller, 04.08.08

2 comments:
"You reckon that's a sign Frank...?"
"Yep, I reckon it is..."
very cool... nice to see the windows open in the old pics... wonder if the pickle building can be moved downtown
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