Hotel At Old Town
Name of Building
Hotel At Old Town
Town or City, Country where the building was originally established
Wichita, Kansas
Date the building was designed and/or first built
Original Construction – 1942. District-Wide Redevelopment – 1990s–present. Major Adaptive Reuse Phases – 2000s–2020s
Name of Architect, Builder, or Primary Patron Responsible
Original Architect – U.S. Army Corps of Engineers / Federal wartime industrial design teams.
Redevelopment Architects – Various local and regional firms contributing to incremental adaptive-reuse projects
Builder (Original) U.S. Government wartime construction contractors
Redevelopment Architects – Various local and regional firms contributing to incremental adaptive-reuse projects
Builder (Original) U.S. Government wartime construction contractors
Culturally Specific Time Period
World War II–Era Industrial Architecture
Geo-Location
37.68865965917272, -97.32907179754164
Materials
Brick, Concrete, Steal
Size and/or Scale of Building
Height: 3 to 5 stories, depending on building
Architectural Type
Public
Formal Style
Exterior: Wartime Industrial / Warehouse Vernacular (primary). Contemporary Industrial (redeveloped)
Building Description
The Old Town District of Wichita centers around a massive 1942 wartime warehouse, a reinforced-concrete and brick structure built as part of the city’s logistical network supporting World War II production. Originally conceived as a utilitarian storage and distribution center, the building’s architecture emphasized efficiency above all: wide structural bays, minimal ornamentation, generous industrial windows, and robust loading facilities. The surrounding blocks mirrored this architectural language, forming a unified industrial campus defined by durable materials and practical design.
Beginning in the 1990s and accelerating into the 21st century, the district underwent a comprehensive transformation, shifting from a declining industrial zone into one of Wichita’s primary mixed-use neighborhoods. Adaptive reuse introduced a broad array of new programs: offices, coworking spaces, galleries, specialty retail, event venues, and a prominent food hall occupying the ground floor of the former warehouse. Renovators retained much of the original industrial character exposed brick, concrete floors, steel window frames while overlaying modern systems and design interventions.
Over time, Old Town evolved from a wartime supply depot to a civic cultural destination, with restored streetscapes, improved pedestrian infrastructure, and preserved architectural textures. The district’s renewed vitality honors its industrial heritage while offering contemporary urban amenities, making it a leading example of large-scale adaptive reuse in the American Midwest.
Beginning in the 1990s and accelerating into the 21st century, the district underwent a comprehensive transformation, shifting from a declining industrial zone into one of Wichita’s primary mixed-use neighborhoods. Adaptive reuse introduced a broad array of new programs: offices, coworking spaces, galleries, specialty retail, event venues, and a prominent food hall occupying the ground floor of the former warehouse. Renovators retained much of the original industrial character exposed brick, concrete floors, steel window frames while overlaying modern systems and design interventions.
Over time, Old Town evolved from a wartime supply depot to a civic cultural destination, with restored streetscapes, improved pedestrian infrastructure, and preserved architectural textures. The district’s renewed vitality honors its industrial heritage while offering contemporary urban amenities, making it a leading example of large-scale adaptive reuse in the American Midwest.
Names(s) and location(s) of the museum holding the object(s)
Originally A 1942-era, 1-million-sf storage warehouse, originally built for war-time production / storage. Renovated into offices, coworking spaces, event venues, and a large food hall on the ground level.
Image source
Source
https://image-tc.galaxy.tf/wijpeg-2gfz0da3r48ouek11ee187dvj/historic-hotel-at-old-town.jpg?width=1920
Source
https://image-tc.galaxy.tf/wijpeg-8juf8uh3ewx0anr2fo9z0grct/atrium-lobby.jpg?width=360&height=300
https://image-tc.galaxy.tf/wijpeg-2gfz0da3r48ouek11ee187dvj/historic-hotel-at-old-town.jpg?width=1920
Source
https://image-tc.galaxy.tf/wijpeg-8juf8uh3ewx0anr2fo9z0grct/atrium-lobby.jpg?width=360&height=300
Creative Commons or other copyright information
Images 1-4: Creative Commons
Student First and Last Name
Justin Forster
Bibliographic references for the item
Source
- WiCHITA, KS Old Town Hotel: Restored, historic downtown hotel (no date). https://www.hotelatoldtown.com/our-history.
- WiCHITA, KS Old Town Hotel: Restored, historic downtown hotel (no date). https://www.hotelatoldtown.com/our-history.
Citation
Original Architect – U.S. Army Corps of Engineers / Federal wartime industrial design teams.
Redevelopment Architects – Various local and regional firms contributing to incremental adaptive-reuse projects
Builder (Original) U.S. Government wartime construction contractors, “Hotel At Old Town,” World Architecture, accessed June 28, 2026, https://www.worldarchitecture.artinterp2.org/items/show/204.
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