"TransOK Building"@en . . "U.S.A."@en . . . . . . "Active"@en . . "36.15000152587891"^^ . "58514190"^^ . "Art Deco Lofts and Apartments"@en . "TransOK Building"@en . "Art Deco Lofts and Apartments"@en . "Art Deco Lofts and Apartments (2016)"@en . "1929"^^ . . . "Art Deco"@en . "Arthur M. Atkinson Joseph R. Koberling"@en . "Public Service Co. of Oklahoma Building 2 West 6th Street Tulsa, Oklahoma"@en . . "In 1899, the Vinita Electric Light, Ice and Power Company, which was headquartered in the Indian Territory town of Vinita (now in Oklahoma) obtained a charter to provide electric power to that community. In 1913, the company consolidated with similar independent companies in Tulsa, Guthrie, Coalgate, Lehigh and Atoka to form a new company, named Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO). The founder and first president of PSO was Frederick William \"Fred\" Insull, who moved the company's headquarters to Tulsa in 1916. The Public Service Co. of Oklahoma Building, originally completed in 1929, was the headquarters of the electric service utility in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Public Service Co. of Oklahoma (PSC). It was known by that name until its owner (then known as PSO) was acquired by Central & Southwest Corporation (CSC), a major utility holding company, when the building was renamed as the PSO Building. CSC was later acquired by a larger holding company, American Electric Power Company, which retained PSO as an operating company serving customers in the state of Oklahoma. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRIS #84003443) on April 10, 1984. It was added as a Contributing Property to the Oil Capital Historic District in 2010. PSO vacated this building and sold it to a California real estate investor in 2005. PSO then moved its personnel to the former Central High School building in downtown Tulsa, moves which were completed in 2007. The investor, Maurice Kanbar held the building until 2012, when he sold it, as part of a package, to Stuart Price, one of his associates. The new owner decided to repurpose the building from corporate offices to luxury apartments, and spent several years thoroughly renovating the interior. He also renamed the building Art Deco Lofts and Apartments. Apartment buyers began moving into the building in mid 2016."@en . "4993.25969088"^^ . . "37"^^ . "-95.98999786376953"^^ . . . "Art Deco Lofts and Apartments"@en . . "Stuart Price"@en . "1105773516"^^ . . . "Public Service Co. of Oklahoma Building"@en . "2"^^ . . . . . . . "9536"^^ . "Art Deco Lofts and Apartments"@en . "4993.25969088"^^ . . "Tulsa, Oklahoma"@en . . "7"^^ . . "Active" . "7"^^ . . "1018.40312448"^^ . . "2 West 6th Street"@en . . "commercial"@en . . . . "36.576"^^ . "36.15 -95.99" . "residential"@en . "Zig zag"@en . "37"^^ . . . . "1018.40312448"^^ . "In 1899, the Vinita Electric Light, Ice and Power Company, which was headquartered in the Indian Territory town of Vinita (now in Oklahoma) obtained a charter to provide electric power to that community. In 1913, the company consolidated with similar independent companies in Tulsa, Guthrie, Coalgate, Lehigh and Atoka to form a new company, named Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO). The founder and first president of PSO was Frederick William \"Fred\" Insull, who moved the company's headquarters to Tulsa in 1916."@en . . "POINT(-95.98999786377 36.150001525879)"^^ . . . "Public Service Co. of Oklahoma (PSO) Building"@en . . .