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Lord Baltimore Hotel, Baltimore MD | Nearby Businesses


20 W Baltimore St
Baltimore, MD 21201


The Lord Baltimore Hotel is located at 20 West Baltimore Street in the downtown area of Baltimore, Maryland.DescriptionThe hotel was designed by William Lee Stoddart and opened on December 30, 1928. The 22 story hotel, designed in the French Renaissance style, has a brick veneer over a steel frame. The building, which is 289 feet tall, is topped with a tower featuring a mansard roof of copper.In 1958, after the Baltimore City Council considered but failed to pass an ordinance prohibiting racial segregation in public accommodations, the Lord Baltimore Hotel voluntarily ended its restrictive guest policies. Following the redevelopment of the downtown area in the 1990s, the hotel is within walking distance of many Baltimore attractions such as the Inner Harbor, Camden Yards, and the National Aquarium.The Lord Baltimore Hotel closed in 1982, needing a major renovation. It was bought by a partnership headed by local developer Saul Perlmutter in 1983 and was renovated in 1985. The partnership filed for bankruptcy in 1987 and the hotel was then taken over from its defunct creditor by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation during the savings and loan crisis.

Historical Place Near Lord Baltimore Hotel

Hippodrome Theatre
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
12 N Eutaw St
Baltimore, MD 21201

The Hippodrome Theatre is a theater in Baltimore, Maryland. Built in 1914 for impresarios Marion Scott Pearce and Scheck, the 2300-seat theater was the foremost vaudeville house in Baltimore, as well as a movie theater. When the movie palace opened it was the largest theatre south of Philadelphia. The Hippodrome was designed by Thomas W. Lamb, one of the foremost theater architects of his time. Lamb gave the theater an unusually strong presence on Eutaw Street through the use of brick and terra cotta on a massive façade. The Hippodrome was renovated in 2004 for use as a performing arts theater, and is part of the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center.The site had previously been occupied by the five story Eutaw House Hotel, built in 1835 and destroyed by fire on May 25, 1912. The new theater had an original capacity of 3,000 seats and boasted a Moller organ, as well as a house orchestra that survived into the 1950s. The Loew's chain operated the Hippodrome from 1917 to 1924, then Keith-Albee-Orpheum assumed stewardship. In 1920 the average weekly attendance was 30,000. During the 1930s the Hippodrome featured such performers as Jack Benny, Milton Berle, Bob Hope, Martha Raye, Dinah Shore, Red Skelton, The Three Stooges, the Andrews Sisters, Morey Amsterdam and Benny Goodman. Frank Sinatra first performed with Harry James at the Hippodrome. Live performances ceased in 1959, but movies remained strong through the 1960s. The Hippodrome finally closed in 1990 as the last movie theater in downtown Baltimore.

Baltimore City Hall
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
100 N Holliday St
Baltimore, MD 21202

(410) 396-3100

Baltimore City Hall is the official seat of government of the City of Baltimore, in the State of Maryland. The City Hall houses the offices of the Mayor and those of the City Council of Baltimore. The building also hosts the city Comptroller, some various city departments, agencies and boards/commissions along with the historic chambers of the Baltimore City Council. Situated on a city block bounded by East Lexington Street on the north, Guilford Avenue (formerly North Street) on the west, East Fayette Street on the south and North Holliday Street with City Hall Plaza and the War Memorial Plaza to the east, the six-story structure was designed by the then 22-year-old new architect, George Aloysius Frederick (1842-1924) in the Second Empire style, a Baroque revival, with prominent Mansard roofs with richly-framed dormers, and two floors of a repeating Serlian window motif over an urbanely rusticated basement.HistoryThe building's cornerstone was laid on the southeastern corner of the new municipal structure in October, 1867

Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
409 Cathedral St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 727-3565

Hippodrome Theatre
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
12 N Eutaw St
Baltimore, MD 21201

The Hippodrome Theatre is a former vaudeville theater in Baltimore, Maryland. Built in 1914 for impresarios Pierce and Scheck, the 2300-seat theater was the foremost vaudeville house in Baltimore, as well as a movie theater. The Hippodrome was designed by Thomas White Lamb, one of the foremost theater architects of his time. Lamb gave the theater an unusually strong presence on Eutaw Street through the use of brick and terra cotta on a massive façade. The Hippodrome has been recently renovated for use as a performing arts theater, and is part of the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center. The site had previously been occupied by the five story Eutaw House Hotel, built in 1835 and destroyed by fire on 25 May 1912. The new theater had an original capacity of 3,000 seats and boasted a Moller organ, as well as a house orchestra that survived into the 1950s. The Loew's chain operated the Hippodrome from 1917 to 1924, then Keith-Albee-Orpheum assumed stewardship. During the 1930s the Hippodrome featured such performers as Jack Benny, Milton Berle, Bob Hope, Martha Raye, Dinah Shore, Red Skelton, the Andrews Sisters, Morey Amsterdam and Benny Goodman.

Emerson Bromo-Seltzer Tower
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
21 S Eutaw St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(443) 874-3596

Emerson Tower often referenced as Emerson Bromo-Seltzer Tower is a 15-story, 88m skyscraper erected in 1911 at the corner of Eutaw and Lombard Streets in Baltimore, Maryland, designed by Joseph Evans Sperry for Bromo-Seltzer inventor "Captain" Isaac E. Emerson.HistoryIt was the tallest building in Baltimore from 1911 until 1923. The design of the tower along with the original factory building at its base was inspired by the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, Italy, which was seen by Emerson during a tour of Europe in 1900. Systems engineering for the building's original design was completed by Henry Adams. The factory was demolished in 1969 and replaced with a firehouse.The building features four clock faces adorning the tower's 15th floor on the North, South, East and West sides. Installed by the Seth Thomas Clock Company at an original cost of US$3,965, they are made of translucent white glass and feature the letters B-R-O-M-O S-E-L-T-Z-E-R, with the Roman numerals being less prominent. The dials, which are illuminated at night with mercury-vapor lamps, are 24 feet (7.3 meters) in diameter, and the minute and hour hands approximately 12 and 10 feet (3.7 and 3.0 meters) in length respectively. Upon its completion, the Bromo Seltzer Tower featured the largest four dial gravity driven clock in the world. Originally driven by weights, the moving parts are now electrically powered. The word BROMO reads clockwise, and SELTZER counterclockwise, which results in the letters being located in the following positions:

Zion Lutheran Church
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
400 E Lexington St
Baltimore, MD 21202

(410) 727-3939

Zion Lutheran Church, also known as the Zion Church of the City of Baltimore, is a historic Lutheran church located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States.HistoryThe congregation was founded in 1755 in order to serve the needs of Lutheran immigrants from Germany, as well as Germans from Pennsylvania who moved to Baltimore. It has a bilingual congregation that provides sermons in both German and English. In 1762 the congregation built its first church on Fish Street (later East Fayette Street). By 1773, a new church constitution had replaced the church's earlier core document, and eventually, the 1672 structure was also replaced by a bigger building, the current Zion Church on North Gay Street, erected from 1807 to 1808 in a Gothic style. An additional expansion of the church to the west along East Lexington Street to North Holliday Street composed of an "Adlersaal" (Parish House), bell tower, parsonage and an enclosed garden designed of Hanseatic North German architecture was constructed under Rev. Julius K. Hoffman in 1912-1913. In the late 1920s, the entire block south of the church was razed to form a monumental square (known as War Memorial Plaza or, less frequently, as "City Hall Plaza") opposite the Baltimore City Hall of 1875 on the western side and construction at the eastern end of the War Memorial Building with an auditorium, historical exhibit area and veterans organizations offices. On the south side of the church buildings facing the plaza, a new headquarters for the Baltimore City Fire Department was constructed in a Georgian-Federal style complementing the original Zion Church around the corner.

Transamerica Tower
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
100 Light St # B1
Baltimore, MD 21202

Transamerica Tower and originally built as the "USF&G Building", serving as headquarters of the United States Fidelity and Guarantee Company, a specialized insurance company founded in Baltimore in 1896, and relocated here from its former complex of three adjoining early 20th Century masonry structures at the southwest corner of South Calvert and Redwood Streets. Later occupied by and known as the Legg-Mason Building), it is a 40-story, 161m skyscraper completed in 1973 in downtown Baltimore, Maryland at 100 Light Street on the city block bounded by South Charles, East Lombard, Light and East Pratt Streets, facing the former "The Basin" of the Helen Delich Bentley Port of Baltimore on the Northwest Branch of the Patapsco River and the newly iconic Inner Harbor downtown business waterfront redevelopment of the 1970s-80's era.

St. Alphonsus' Church, Rectory, Convent and Halle
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
114 W Saratoga St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 685-6090

St. Alphonsus Church, Rectory, Convent and Halle, also known as St. John Neumann Shrine and "Baltimore's Powerhouse of Prayer," is an historic Roman Catholic church complex located within the Archdiocese of Baltimore in Baltimore, Maryland, United States.DescriptionThe church is based on the design of St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna and follows a basilica floorplan. The structure is constructed of red brick with limestone accents in the Gothic Revival style. The nave reaches a height of 50ft and the ornate steeple rises 210ft above the three-level bell tower. A 12ft gold cross caps the steeple.The Halle is a -story brick structure also in the Gothic Revival style opposite the church across Saratoga Street. It features a center entrance housed in projecting square bay topped by a gable. The adjacent three-story convent and the four-story rectory simple Georgian townhouses of brick. The complex was constructed between 1842 and 1845 and was the first major design by noted Baltimore architect Robert Cary Long, Jr.. From its founding until 1917, the parish was overseen by the Redemptorist Fathers whose members came to Baltimore to minister to the growing German immigrant community. John Neumann was one of the early pastors of St. Alphonsus prior to becoming Bishop of Baltimore in 1860. He was canonized June 19, 1977. Neumann's assistant pastor, Francis Xavier Seelos, served as pastor after his departure and later worked in areas from Connecticut to Illinois and New Orleans. Seelos was beatified April 9, 2000.

Baltimore Gas and Electric Company Building
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
39 W Lexington St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 685-0123

The Baltimore Gas and Electric Company Building is a historic office building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a 21-story skyscraper designed by the Boston and Baltimore-based architectural firm of Parker, Thomas and Rice, and was constructed in 1916. Standing at 88m it was tied with the Emerson Bromo-Seltzer Tower from 1916 to 1923 as the tallest building in Baltimore. It was constructed with a structural steel skeleton and tile arch flooring structure. The exterior is clad with gray granite and gray and white marble from the first through third floors (including the mezzanine) and glazed terra cotta in a Beaux-Arts Classical Style. The building includes sculptures at the fourth floor representing "knowledge", "light", "heat" and "power."Baltimore Gas and Electric Company Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.A smaller addition was built in 1966, designed by Fisher, Nes, Campbell and Associates.It was purchased in 2006 and reopened in 2007 as luxury apartments complete with two penthouse levels by Southern Management Corporation.

Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Baltimore Branch
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
114 E Lexington St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 951-4650

The Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Baltimore Branch Office is one of the two Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond branch offices. The Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond's Baltimore Branch is an operational and regional center for Maryland, the metropolitan Washington D.C. area, Northern Virginia, and northeastern West Virginia. The Baltimore branch is part of the Fifth District and has the code E5. It supports Check 21 operations, supplies coin and currency to financial institutions and works to maintain stability in the financial sector throughout the Fifth District and also works with local elected officials and non-profit organizations to support fair housing initiatives throughout the Fifth District. The Baltimore branch was founded in March 1918 and is currently headed by William R. Roberts.Each branch of the Federal Reserve Banks has a board of either seven or five directors, a majority of whom are appointed by the parent Federal Reserve Bank; the others are appointed by the Board of Governors. Branch directors serve staggered three-year terms (two-year terms if the Branch has five directors). One of the members appointed by the Federal Reserve Board is designated annually as chairman of the board of that Branch in a manner prescribed by the parent Federal Reserve Bank. The Baltimore branch currently allows private and educational tours of up to thirty people with reservations. Cell phones and cameras are not permitted inside the building. The Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Baltimore Branch Office sponsors the annual Fed Challenge to encourage better understanding of the nation's central bank and the forces influencing economic conditions in the United States and abroad. In 1997, the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond- Baltimore Branch won the silver U.S. Senate Productivity and Maryland Quality Award. In 2008, Dorothy Voorhees received the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Baltimore Branch 2008 Excellence Award for outstanding achievement in the study of economics.

Baltimore Grand
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
401 W Fayette St
Baltimore, MD 21201

Baltimore Grand is a historic bank building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It occupies two historic bank buildings, the former Western National Bank (1881, remodeled 1912) and the former Eutaw Savings Bank (1887, remodeled 1911), which were connected in 1989 and adaptively reused to create a commercial catering and banquet facility. It features a large arched window above the entrance portico that is framed by paired fluted pilasters with Corinthian capitals extending to the cornice line.The former Eutaw Savings Bank is a Classical Revival brownstone, built when the bank vacated the Baltimore Equitable Society Building across the street. The original building was designed by Charles L. Carson. A 1911 addition was designed by Baldwin and Pennington.Baltimore Grand was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

Building at 423 West Baltimore Street
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
423 W Baltimore St
Baltimore, MD 21201

Building at 423 West Baltimore Street is a historic retail and wholesale building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a five-story loft structure of the Queen Anne style. It achieved its present configuration in 1893, as the result of extensive alteration of an existing three-story brick warehouse. The storefront retains its important cast-iron elements, and the upper floors are essentially unchanged.Building at 423 West Baltimore Street was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.

One Calvert Plaza
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
1 S Calvert St
Baltimore, MD 21202

(410) 727-5366

One Calvert Plaza, formerly the Continental Trust Company Building, is a historic 16-story, 76m skyscraper in Baltimore, Maryland. The Beaux-Arts, early modern office building was constructed with steel structural members clad with terra cotta fireproofing and tile-arch floors. Its namesake was chartered in 1898 and instrumental in merging several Baltimore light and gas companies into one city-wide system. It was constructed in 1900-1901 to designs prepared by D.H. Burnham and Company of Chicago and is a survivor of the 1904 fire that destroyed more than in the present downtown financial district. When it was built in 1901, it was then the tallest building in Baltimore, and it kept that title until being surpassed by the iconic Bromo-Seltzer Tower of the Emerson Drug Company led by Capt. Isaac Edward Emerson, (1859-1931), the inventor of the stomach remedy and antacid, "Bromo-Seltzer" in 1911.Continental Trust Company Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. It is within the Baltimore National Heritage Area.

Rombro Building
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
22--24 S. Howard St.
Baltimore, MD 21201

Rombro Building is a historic loft building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a six-story loft building constructed in 1881, and designed as a double warehouse. The first floor storefronts feature brick, stone, terra cotta, and cast iron framing and reflects the Queen Anne style in its facade organization and detailing.Rombro Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

Market Center (Baltimore, Maryland)
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
221 N Paca St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 837-3710

Market Center is a national historic district in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is an approximately 24-block area in downtown Baltimore that includes buildings associated with the development of the area as Baltimore’s historic retail district. The area evolved from an early 19th-century neighborhood of urban rowhouses to a premiere shopping district featuring large department stores, grand theaters, and major chain stores. The diverse size, style, scale, and types of structures within the district reflect its residential origins and evolution as a downtown retail center.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

Stewart's Department Store
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
226 W Lexington St # 232
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 523-7638

Stewart's Department Store, also known as the Posner Building, is a historic department store building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Catholic Relief Services is currently headquartered there.ArchitectureThe Stewart's Department Store structure was designed in 1899 by Charles E. Cassell and is a six story brick and terra cotta steel-framed building detailed in a highly ornate Italian Renaissance Revival style. It features an exuberant ornamental detail includes fluted Ionic and Corinthian columns, lion heads, caryatids, wreaths, garlands, cartouches, and an elaborate bracketed cornice.HistoryThis building served as the flagship store for Stewart’s Baltimore operations and anchored Baltimore’s premier downtown retail location at Lexington and Howard Streets.Stewart's Department Store Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.

Odd Fellows Hall (Baltimore, 1891)
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
300 Cathedral St
Baltimore, MD 21201

The Odd Fellows Hall in Baltimore, Maryland, United States, is a historic building that was the meeting place of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows fraternal organization, and is now an apartment building. It was built in 1891 and is a five bay structure featuring a central arched entrance with brownstone Romanesque columns and architraves. In the late 1970s, an adaptive reuse project retained most of its exterior architectural character while providing modern office space in the renovated interior.Odd Fellows Hall was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

St. Paul's Church Rectory
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
24 W Saratoga St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 685-2585

St. Paul's Church Rectory, located a block west of Old St. Paul's Episcopal Church (formerly "Protestant Episcopal" since 1789, Anglican/Church of England before) is a historic Episcopal rectory located on steep "Cathedral Hill" at the northeast corner of Cathedral Street (which merges with North Liberty Street, which becomes Hopkins Place and South Sharp Street further south) and West Saratoga Streets in downtown Baltimore, Maryland, United States. In the rear of the old rectory is a small alley-like extension of West Pleasant Street and to the east behind the North Charles Street former residences and now commercial structures, is another small alley extension of Little (or North) Sharp Street.It is located on ground donated by Col. John Eager Howard, (1752-1827), commander of the famed "Maryland Line" regiment of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War and who was noted at the Battles of Brooklyn (Long Island) in New York, Monmouth in New Jersey, Guilford Courthouse in North Carolina, and the Cowpens in South Carolina. He was also former Governor of Maryland and U. S. Senator along with being an influential Baltimorean. He owned the large estate of "Belvidere" north of the town which was also known as "Howard's Woods", with his Georgian/Federal style mansion located at the modern intersection of East Chase and North Calvert Streets (which was razed around 1875, when Calvert Street was extended further north to the old city limits at Boundary Avenue (now North Avenue). Many land donations of his went to churches, schools and other public institutions such as the Lexington Market as the town grew north and west. Most notably the land on which the City's most important landmark, the Washington Monument now sits (built 1815-1827), with its four surrounding park-like squares (East and West Mount Vernon Place along with North and South Washington Place - laid out early 1830s) which has added so much character to the neighborhood and made Baltimore famous, came from his generousity. Plus after his death, his sons and family descendents further developed the extensive estate and land holdings, constructed or bought many townhouses and mansions on the newly platted grid of streets in the coming Victorian era. The Howards grew richer and more prosperous on the development rights in what became known as the Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood and what became known as the "Western Precincts" of the rapidly expanding city, then the fourth largest in America.

Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
202 E Redwood St
Baltimore, MD 21202

Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company is a historic bank building in Baltimore, designed by the Baltimore architectural firm of Wyatt and Sperry and constructed in 1885. It has a brick-with-stone-ornamentation Romanesque Revival structure, with deeply set windows, round-arch window openings, squat columns with foliated capitals, steeply pitched broad plane roofs, and straight-topped window groups. The interior features a large banking room with a balcony, Corinthian columns and ornate wall plaster work.The Safe Deposit Company on Redwood Street in Baltimore was one of the few buildings that survived the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904. It was "created as a repository of Southern wealth in 1864" This date was not only "one year before the start of the Civil War but one year after the National Bank Act of 1863". Coincidentally, the March 10, 1864 grant of the state charter for the Safe Deposit was on the same day that newspapers reported General Sherman's arrival in Vicksburg, MS at the end of the Vicksburg Campaign.The Safe Deposit Building was finished in 1886, was "red brick with light red firestone trim". Around the turn of the century, the Safe Deposit Company boasted about the security of their vaults. Safe Deposit touted its "Great Vault," whose three fireproof outer doors and two burglar-proof inner ones sat in walls of steel and iron, surrounded by a foot of concrete and 2 feet of brick, according to a company history. Along the street, there were "spy steps" which enabled roving late 19th century policemen to peer into the windows. These "spy steps" provided in the center of the south part of the west wall, and on each side of the doorway are about three feet from the ground. They are a protruding stone step, and at shoulder height is a bronze ring. This was intended to assist a policeman to look in the windows. The "brass ring at shoulder level was used to balance them on the step. The steps are still jutting out into the sidewalk on both the Calvert and Redwood street sides of the Safe Deposit building. However, metal rings are only on one of the Calvert "spy steps" and on the right-hand side of the Redwood Street main entrance.

Canton House
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
300 Water St
Baltimore, MD 21202

(410) 752-5444

Canton House is a historic office building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a -story Colonial Revival-style building, with seven bays across the front façade and three bays across the side. The first story level is in marble and brick is laid in Flemish bond from the second story up. The main entrance features two fluted Corinthian columns. It was constructed in 1923 as the headquarters of one of Baltimore’s largest and most colorful businesses, the Canton Company, a business established in 1828 by Peter Cooper, most remembered for inventing and manufacturing the Tom Thumb steam locomotive.Canton House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Local Business Near Lord Baltimore Hotel

French Kitchen
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
20 W Baltimore St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 539-8400

The Lord Baltimore Hotel's signature restaurant, French Kitchen, is a modern bistro that combines classic French fare with international flavors.

Radisson Plaza Lord Baltimore Hotel
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
20 W Baltimore St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 539-8400

Charles Center station
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
211 N Liberty St
Baltimore, MD 21201

The Charles Center station is a Baltimore Metro Subway station in Baltimore, Maryland. Located by the Charles Center in Downtown Baltimore, it is nearby various landmarks and bus transfers. It was the final stop of the line until 1995, when the extension to Johns Hopkins Hospital opened.The Red Line, a proposed but not yet funded light rail line, would if built include an underground station here providing a transfer point to the currently existing Metro Subway system. However, on June 25, 2015, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan declared that he would not provide state funds for the project, thus putting the Red Line in jeopardy.

Baltimore Immigration & Naturalzation
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
31 Hopkins Plz
Baltimore, MD 21201

Eoir Baltimore Immigration Court
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
31 Hopkins Plz
Baltimore, MD 21201-2825

Internal Revenue Service
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
31 Hopkins St, Ste 820B
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 962-3968

W W Contractors
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
31 Hopkins Plz, Ste 204
Baltimore, MD 21201-2805

(410) 347-0386

Department of Veterans Benefits
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
31 Hopkins Plz, Ste 1229
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 779-3401

US Department of Justice Immigration & Naturalization Service
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
31 Hopkins St, Ste 820B
Baltimore, MD 21201-2896

(410) 962-1898

Tngden Bait Energy
Distance: 0.0 mi Competitive Analysis
117 W Baltimore St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 234-0585

Avis Car Rental
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
101 West Fayette Street, Baltimore Harbor Hotel
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 685-6405

Avis Car Rental Baltimore operates one of the world's best-known car rental brands. Avis is one of the world's top brands for customer loyalty.

Big Night Baltimore New Year's Eve Extravaganza
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
101 W Fayette St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(877) 772-5425

Baltimore's largest and most exciting New Year's Eve Gala.

Budget Car Rental
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
101 W Fayette St, Baltimore Hbr Htl By Concierge
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 528-5913

Baltimore Locksmith
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
121 W Fayette St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 800-0648

Baltimore City Office of Child Support Enforcement
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1 N Charles St, Ste 500
Baltimore, MD

(410) 951-8124

Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
300 S Charles St
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 547-1855

Enjoy fast and easy car rental bookings from Enterprise Rent-A-Car at one of our 6000 branches, in cities, airports and neighborhood near you.

Child Support
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
1 n. charles sreet
Baltimore, MD 21201

(410) 347-5943

Baltimore City Elections
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
417 E Fayette St Ste 129
Baltimore, MD 21202

(410) 396-5574

Artemis Properties
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
100 N Charles St, Ste 1730
Baltimore, MD 21201-3818

(410) 244-7200