Hayden Buildings
Columbus, Ohio
Date: 1901
Address: 16 East Broad
Not designed by Frank Packard (Chicago architects Nimmons & Fellows) but is significant here because it was the location of Packard's office in the top floor penthouse
Listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2009
Historical Photos of old and new Hayden Buildings

These detail pieces were used in the Hayden Building.

The original Hayden Building is to the right. The taller and newer Hayden is to the left. For many years it was the office of Frank Packard.

A view of High and Broad from above the Ohio Statehouse in 1906: from left to right, the 12-story Harrison Building, 11-story Wyandotte and Wheeler Buildings, the 5-story Deshler Hotel complex, the 16-story Capitol Trust Building, the new Hayden skyscraper, and the original Hayden Building.