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The coolest building in every US state

Simmons Hall at MIT.
Simmons Hall at MIT.

  • The US has diverse architecture across its 50 states.
  • Some buildings are grandiose and elegant, while others are quirky and unique.
  • These buildings make for some cool and striking tourist attractions.

The United States, with its extensive history, has given rise to some striking and unique architecture.

From preserving local history to showcasing some of each region’s unique cultural quirks, these 51 buildings across the US are worthy of being tourist attractions.

Defining what we consider to be the “coolest” is hard. We evaluated every state on its own terms, and we’ve found that the architecture across all 50 — and Washington, DC — is as diverse as its population.

In states like California and Massachusetts, it meant picking buildings that look futuristic and elegant, like something out of a science-fiction movie.

In other states, like Maine and the Carolinas, we’ve found that the coolest buildings are distinctive because of their place in history or the state’s culture.

James Grebey and Jacob Shamsian contributed to an earlier version of this story.

ALABAMA: Gulf, Mobile, and Ohio Passenger Terminal
Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Passenger Terminal

The Gulf, Mobile, and Ohio Passenger Terminal in Mobile, Alabama, which has Spanish influences with its cream walls and red clay tiles, was designed by P. Thornton Marye. It was constructed in 1907 and has undergone restoration since passenger train service ceased in the 1950s.

ALASKA: The University of Alaska’s Museum of the North
The University of Alaska Museum of the North

The University of Alaska Museum of the North is home to numerous exhibits showcasing the native cultures, natural wonders, and wildlife of our nation’s largest state. It’s also a stylish refuge from the cold.

ARIZONA: Chapel of the Holy Cross
Chapel of the Holy Cross

The Chapel of the Holy Cross in Sedona was finished in 1956, and it juts out majestically from a red stone butte some 200 feet above the ground.

ARKANSAS: Thorncrown Chapel
thorncrown chapel

The beautiful Thorncrown Chapel in Eureka Springs looks like an open-air structure, but it’s actually a serene, glass-enclosed architectural marvel.

CALIFORNIA: The Chemosphere
The Chemosphere

It was designed in 1960, but the Chemosphere still looks futuristic. It’s a house with 2,200 square feet of space, perched atop a 30-foot concrete pole. And it’s survived every single Californian earthquake to pass through the San Fernando Valley since it was built.

COLORADO: Cliff Palace in Mesa Verde National Park
Mesa Verde National Park

Mesa Verde National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, features some of the best-preserved prehistoric landscapes of the Ancestral Puebloan people. These ancient dwellings, where the Ancestral Puebloans once lived, were constructed on the sides of natural cliffs.

While most dwellings had only one to five rooms, the Cliff Palace, the largest known cliff dwelling in North America, had 150 rooms, 23 sacred meeting spaces, and housed approximately 100 people, according to the National Park Service.

CONNECTICUT: Grace Farms
Grace Farms

The main feature of Grace Farms in New Canaan is a serpentine wooden pavilion that links glass-walled rooms, including a library, stage, tea room, and a gym with a full basketball court. Completed in 2015, it’s open to the public for free.

DELAWARE: Wilmington’s Grand Opera House
Wilmington's Grand Opera House

The country’s oldest state has some classic buildings that stand the test of time. Wilmington’s Grand Opera House, built in 1871, is as classic as it gets.

FLORIDA: The Salvador Dalí Museum
The Salvador Dalí Museum

The Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg is a fittingly unique tribute to the beloved master of surrealism. The museum boasts the largest collection of Dali’s work outside Europe.

GEORGIA: The Earth Lodge on Ocmulgee Mounds National Historical Park
Ocmulgee National Monument

This might not look much like other buildings in this list, but the Ocmulgee Mounds National Park’s Earth Lodge dates back to the year 1015, per the National Park Service.

The lodge is a reconstructed council chamber of the native Mississippian culture. While the walls and ceiling were reconstructed in the late 1930s, the clay floor remains the same as the original, dating back over a thousand years.

HAWAII: ʻIolani Palace
ʻIolani Palace in Honolulu is the only royal palace on United States soil. David Kalākaua, the last reining king of Hawaii and the first monarch to travel around the world, was inspired by European palaces he saw on his 1881 voyage.

ʻIolani Palace in Honolulu is the only royal palace on United States soil. David Kalākaua, the last reigning king of Hawaii and the first monarch to travel around the world, was inspired by the European palaces he saw during his 1881 voyage.

IDAHO: The Dog Bark Park Inn
dog bark park inn cottonwood

The Dog Bark Park Inn in Cottonwood is a delightful piece of American kitsch. The bed and breakfast is shaped like two charming beagles.

ILLINOIS: Bahá’í House of Worship
Bahá'í  Wilmette, Illinois

Although there are between 5 and 6 million adherents to the Bahá’í Faith, there are only eight continental houses of worship worldwide. The one in Wilmette, Illinois, is the oldest still standing, and the only one in the United States.

INDIANA: West Baden Springs Hotel
West Baden Springs Hotel

When the West Baden Springs Hotel opened in 1902, it was billed as the Eighth Wonder of the World. While enjoying the view from inside the massive domed atrium — at one point the largest in the world — it’s easy to see why.

IOWA: Grotto of the Redemption
Father Paul Dobberstein promised to build a shrine to the Virgin Mary as she helped cure his grave case of pneumonia. His resulting Grotto of the Redemption in West Bend is made of rocks, shells, fossils, and gems pressed into concrete. It's the size of a football field.

Father Paul Dobberstein promised to build a shrine to the Virgin Mary as she helped cure his grave case of pneumonia. His resulting Grotto of the Redemption in West Bend is made of rocks, shells, fossils, and gems pressed into concrete. It’s the size of a football field.

KANSAS: Big Well in Greensburg
Big Well in Greensburg

The Big Well in Greensburg is a museum that rests atop its titular main attraction: the largest hand-dug well in the world, spanning 32 feet in diameter and reaching a depth of 109 feet.

KENTUCKY: Churchill Downs
Churchill Downs

Churchill Downs, most famously the host of the Kentucky Derby, can hold 120,000 excited, sometimes rowdy, racing fans at max capacity.

LOUISIANA: The Pontalba Buildings
The Pontalba Buildings, which make up two sides of New Orleans' Jackson Square, are emblematic of the French Quarter. Some of the residences on the upper floors are thought to be the oldest continuously-rented apartments in the country.

The Pontalba Buildings, which make up two sides of New Orleans’ Jackson Square, are emblematic of the French Quarter. Some of the residences on the upper floors are believed to be the oldest continuously rented apartments in the country.

MAINE: The Portland Head Light
Portland Head Light

The Portland Head Light — one of the state’s many lighthouses — has been around since 1791. It was built under the directive of George Washington himself.

MARYLAND: The American Visionary Art Museum
American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore

The American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore showcases outsider art. All the works within its wonky exterior were made by inspired, self-taught creators.

MASSACHUSETTS: Simmons Hall at MIT
Simmons Hall at MIT

Simmons Hall at MIT is the coolest dorm building in the US. It looks like a monstrous Tetris piece combined with underground caverns.

MICHIGAN: Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History

The museum, one of the oldest and largest dedicated to African American history, is a three-story building designed with influences of African and local Detroit architecture. The building features a stunning 55-foot-tall glass dome ceiling.

MINNESOTA: The Marjorie McNeely Conservatory
Marjorie McNeely Conservatory

The Marjorie McNeely Conservatory at Saint Paul’s Como Park was opened to the public in 1915 and features Japanese, Bonsai, and butterfly gardens, among others.

MISSISSIPPI: Gehry’s Pods at the Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art
Ohr-O'Keefe Museum of Art

Designed by Frank Gehry — whose striking work also includes the Louis Vuitton Foundation in Paris, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain — the curved metal pods, which house pottery at Biloxi’s Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art, are meant to look as if they were “dancing with the trees,” per the museum’s website.

MISSOURI: The Community Bookshelf
Community Bookshelf missouri

The parking garage at the Kansas City Library is called the Community Bookshelf. It displays the giant spines of 22 classic books that were suggested by Kansas City readers.

MONTANA: Montana State Capitol building
Montana State Capitol

Construction started on the Montana State Capitol in 1896. The inside of the rotunda salutes four types of people central to the state’s early history: a native American, an explorer, a gold miner, and a cowboy.

NEBRASKA: Nebraska State Capitol Building
Nebraska State Capitol Building

The Nebraska Capitol in Lincoln is one of the greatest state capitol buildings in the US. Built between 1922 and 1932, the building features artworks representing the development of law and the state of Nebraska.

NEVADA: Ward Charcoal Ovens
Ward Charcoal Ovens

The distinctive beehive-shaped Ward Charcoal Ovens in Ely were built for silver mining back in the 1870s, and they still look like nothing else on the landscape.

NEW HAMPSHIRE: Mount Washington Hotel
Mount Washington Hotel

Built in 1902, the Mount Washington Hotel — today operating as the Omni Mount Washington Resort — is one of the last remaining grand hotels in the state, and is rumored to be haunted.

NEW JERSEY: Nassau Hall at Princeton University
Nassau Hall is the oldest building at Princeton University. While today it contains the school's administrative offices, during the Revolutionary War it was held by both British and American forces, and was damaged during the battles.

Nassau Hall is the oldest building at Princeton University, dating back to the 1750s. While it now houses the school’s administrative offices, during the Revolutionary War it was occupied by both British and American forces and suffered damage during the battles.

NEW MEXICO: Taos Pueblo
Taos Pueblo
This October 2012 photo shows adobe dwellings at the Taos Pueblo in Taos, N.M., a UNESCO World Heritage site where the Taos native people have lived for 1,000 years. Tours of the pueblo describe the community’s survival and challenges across the centuries. The picture-perfect dwellings are multi-level, often with ladders to reach upper floors and round ovens outside.

Hundreds of years old, Taos Pueblo is a multi-story complex built by Native Americans from the region. It looks like one big, molded piece, and it’s still used as a residence.

NEW YORK: The Chrysler Building
Chrysler Building

The Empire State Building gets all the hype, but it’s the Chrysler Building that’s really the most magnificent skyscraper in New York City. The Art Deco-style building was the tallest in the world when it was built, but it was beaten out by — you guessed it — the Empire State Building just 11 months later.

NORTH CAROLINA: The Executive Mansion
north carolina Executive Mansion

Give it to North Carolina for having its most beautiful building designated as a civil landmark. The state’s Executive Mansion in Raleigh is the home of the governor and a high-profile event venue that’s open to public tours.

NORTH DAKOTA: The North Dakota Heritage Center
North Dakota Heritage Center

At the center of the North Dakota Heritage Center in Bismarck is a great glass cube flanked by two copper-colored wings. It’s the home of the state’s greatest treasures, including Native American historical artifacts and lots of dinosaur fossils.

OHIO: The Longaberger Company building
Longaberger Company

The Longaberger Company, which makes baskets, made a building in Newark that perfectly matches its brand. The building was closed in 2016, and it has sat idle since.

Plans for the property have included a hotel, a coworking space, and, most recently, a mixed-use development, but it still has an unclear path for the future.

OKLAHOMA: First Americans Museum
First Americans Museum

The First Americans Museum’s 175,000-square-foot building in Oklahoma pays homage to the state’s indigenous populations and their history. The design is inspired by the importance placed on the rising and setting sun by Native populations, with the Remembrance Walls being aligned with the sunrise.

The central half-dome is supported by 10 pillars of various stones, which each represent a 10-mile stretch traveled by Native people during forced removal from their original homelands, per the museum’s website.

OREGON: The Portland Building
The Portland Building

In 2009, Travel + Leisure famously called The Portland Building “one of the most hated buildings in America,” and its reputation is split among architecture critics. But its shapes, strange geometric clashes of glass and stone, make it the weird building that Portland most deserves.

PENNSYLVANIA: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater
Frank Lloyd Wright's  Fallingwater

Frank Lloyd Wright‘s 1935 masterpiece Fallingwater remains Pennsylvania’s greatest work of architecture. Water falls from each level of the building into the one below, perfectly integrating with the landscape.

RHODE ISLAND: The Breakers
The Breakers

Built as a summer residence for Cornelius Vanderbilt II, The Breakers mansion in Newport has 70-rooms across 138,300 square feet, making it one of the largest houses in the US and an icon of Gilded Age architecture.

SOUTH CAROLINA: The International African American Museum
the international african american museum south carolina

In South Carolina, the International African American Museum stands on top of 18 13-feet pillars that keep the museum from touching the sacred ground on which it was built.

The museum is situated on the historic site of Gadsden’s Wharf in Charleston’s Cooper River, which was the last and most significant disembarkation point in North America for enslaved Africans during the transatlantic slave trade, per the US Civil Rights Trail website.

SOUTH DAKOTA: The Corn Palace
The Corn Palace

The walls of the Corn Palace in Mitchell are adorned with complex murals and art that’s all been made out of, you guessed it, corn. The design changes every year.

TENNESSEE: Parthenon in Centennial Park
Parthenon in Centennial Park

Built in 1897 for the Tennessee Centennial Exposition — and then reconstructed between 1921 and 1930 — the Parthenon in Centennial Park is a full-sized replica of the Parthenon in Athens, Greece. Today, it’s open to the public as an art museum.

TEXAS: James Turrell’s Twilight Epiphany skyspace
James Turrell Skyspace

Designed by renowned artist James Turrell, the “Twilight Epiphany” Skyspace in Houston is a performance space that makes you feel as though you’ve entered another dimension.

UTAH: Natural History Museum of Utah
Utah's Natural History Museum in Salt Lake City looks like it could have been carved out of the landscape. It was designed by Todd Schliemann of Ennead Architects.

The Natural History Museum of Utah in Salt Lake City looks like it could have been carved out of the landscape. It was designed by Todd Schliemann of Ennead Architects.

VERMONT: The Old Round Church
The Old Round Church in Richmond is technically a 16-sided polygon, but it's still enough of a circle to lend credence to a rumor that it was built in that shape so that the Devil had no corners to hide in.

The Old Round Church in Richmond is technically a 16-sided polygon, but it’s still enough of a circle to lend credence to a rumor that it was built in that shape so that the Devil had no corners to hide in.

VIRGINIA: Dulles International Airport
Dulles International Airport building

If they’re done wrong, airports can be the most insufferable place to spend a few hours. But we have to admire Virginia’s Dulles International Airport, which almost looks like a futuristic aircraft itself.

WASHINGTON: Seattle Central Library
Seattle Central Library
SEATTLE – MAY 19: An exterior view of Seattle’s new Central LIbrary on May 19, 2004 in Seattle, Washington. The glass and steel structure was designed by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture of the Netherlands and Seattle-based LMN Architects and cost $165.5 million to build. It is set to open to the public May 23.

Forget the idea of a dusty old home for books nobody reads. The Seattle Central Library is a miracle of modern architecture.

WASHINGTON, DC: The United States Capitol
Capitol

The United States Capitol is such a mainstay of nightly news and political pop culture that it’s easy to take for granted. It’s nice to step back once in a while and take in the grandeur and historical significance of this government building that reflects on America’s complicated past.

Construction on the Capitol began in September 1793, and much of the structure was built by enslaved workers working alongside free Black and white laborers, per the White House Historical Association. In 2012, a marker was added to the Capitol Visitor Center commemorating the unpaid labor of enslaved people who built the nation’s Capitol.

WEST VIRGINIA: The Palace of Gold
New Vrindaban west virginia

The Palace of Gold is a majestic memorial shrine located in the Hare Krishna community of New Vrindaban.

WISCONSIN: The Burke Brise Soleil
The most striking feature of the Milwaukee Art Museum is the Burke Brise Soleil, a towering sunscreen with a 217-foot wingspan. It folds and unfolds twice a day.

The most striking feature of the Milwaukee Art Museum is the Burke Brise Soleil, a towering sunscreen with a 217-foot wingspan. It folds and unfolds twice a day.

WYOMING: Smith Mansion
smith mansion wyoming

This wacky-looking building is in the middle of the remote Wapiti Valley. In 1971, architect Francis Lee Smith started building the structure by hand as his and his family’s home. After completing the first floor in 1973, he could not stop building. He died after falling from one of the balconies in 1992.

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Who is Taylor Swift’s song ‘Father Figure’ about? The lyrics and references suggest it’s Big Machine CEO Scott Borchetta

Scott Borchetta and Taylor Swift attend the 2011 ACM Honors.
Scott Borchetta and Taylor Swift attend the 2011 ACM Honors.

  • “Father Figure” is the fourth track on Taylor Swift’s new album, “The Life of a Showgirl.”
  • The song uses character work and real-life touchpoints to explore power dynamics in business.
  • Swift said the song is about “a young ingenue and their mentor,” likely inspired by Scott Borchetta.

When she isn’t singing about the record-breaking Eras Tour or her fairy-tale engagement to Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift’s new album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” is surprisingly fraught with tales of rivalry, scandal, betrayal, and even a business relationship gone sour.

Swift is known for writing lyrics with layered allusions and double meanings, and “Father Figure” is one standout example. The song presents itself as a brag, openly flaunting Swift’s influence in her industry, particularly on younger artists who admire her.

Upon further inspection, however, the song’s character work reveals itself. As the narrator, Swift adopts an alpha-male persona to explore a familiar power dynamic.

In Swift’s theatrical event “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl,” which includes behind-the-scenes clips of Swift discussing her creative process, she explained how she used the 1987 George Michael hit “Father Figure” as a jumping-off point for her song of the same name. (Michael is credited as a cowriter on Swift’s version.)

“That line, in the context of the George Michael song, is romantic. It’s about being in love with someone, but also, they look up to you as a mentor,” Swift explained.

“I always thought it could be cool to use the line ‘I’ll be your father figure’ as a creative writing prompt, and turn it into a story about power, and a story about a young ingenue and their mentor, and the way that that relationship can change over time, and betrayal, and wit, and cunning, and cleverness, and strategy,” she continued. “Essentially, it ends up in a ‘Who’s going to win?’ situation. Who’s going to outplay the other? Who’s going to out-fox the other?”

Still, as any Swiftie knows, even her most non-autobiographical and abstract lyrics tend to draw inspiration from her real life. Swift said of the fictional stories in “Folklore,” for example, “I’m gonna infuse my own emotions into these characters, let’s be honest.”

So, who is the egoistical mentor in question? “Father Figure” contains several parallels to Swift’s real life and quotes from past interviews that point us toward one likely answer: Big Machine CEO Scott Borchetta.

Borchetta is the founder and CEO of Big Machine Records, Swift’s former label

“When I found you, you were young, wayward, lost in the cold / Pulled up to you in the Jag, turned your rags into gold,” Swift sings to open “Father Figure.”

These lines seem to mirror Swift’s own discovery as a teen ingenue. At 15, she signed to Big Machine, a boutique record label based in Nashville.

As the label’s founder and CEO, Borchetta took on a parental role in Swift’s life.

“When you have a business relationship with someone for 15 years, there are going to be a lot of ups and a lot of downs,” Swift told Rolling Stone. “But I truly, legitimately thought he looked at me as the daughter he never had.”

Swift’s father-daughter relationship with Borchetta — or, at least, her innocent trust in that dynamic — echoes the relationship at the heart of “Father Figure.”

“Leave it with me,” the narrator coaxes. “I protect the family.”

However, the song isn’t all familial fun; Swift’s narrator is keenly aware of how lucrative this dynamic can be, as long as he can keep his mentee in line. “This love is pure profit, just step into my office,” the chorus goes, and later, “All I asked for is your loyalty, my dear protégé.”

The “pure profit” is no metaphor: Swift quickly became Big Machine’s biggest star, writing and releasing six albums that sold tens of millions of copies.

Taylor Swift and Scott Borchetta pose with certification plaques for her albums
Taylor Swift and Scott Borchetta pose with certification plaques for her albums “Fearless” and “Reputation.”

Her multi-album contract was fulfilled with 2017’s “Reputation,” and in 2018, Swift signed a new deal with Universal Music Group, which allowed her to own any new music that she released outright.

Swift later revealed that renegotiations with Big Machine fell apart when she “pleaded for a chance” to buy the rights to her old music, and Borchetta refused.

“Instead I was given an opportunity to sign back up to Big Machine Records and ‘earn’ one album back at a time, one for every new one I turned in,” Swift wrote in an open letter. “I walked away because I knew once I signed that contract, Scott Borchetta would sell the label, thereby selling me and my future.”

Swift’s prediction came true just one year after her departure, when Borchetta sold Big Machine and all its assets to celebrity manager Scooter Braun.

Swift said she was “sad and grossed out” that Braun, whom she described as a bully, was the new owner of her life’s work.

Scott Borchetta and Scooter Braun celebrate their business partnership in 2019.
Scott Borchetta and Scooter Braun celebrate their business partnership in 2019.

“I thought I knew what betrayal felt like, but this stuff that happened with him was a redefinition of betrayal for me, just because it felt like it was family,” Swift said of her relationship with Borchetta. “To go from feeling like you’re being looked at as a daughter to this grotesque feeling of, ‘Oh, I was actually his prized calf that he was fattening up to sell to the slaughterhouse that would pay the most.'”

When Braun’s acquisition of Big Machine was formalized, he and Borchetta posed for photos together in a wood-paneled bar, with shelves full of whiskey in the background.

In her interview with Rolling Stone, Swift poked fun at those photos: “These are two very rich, very powerful men, using $300 million of other people’s money to purchase, like, the most feminine body of work. And then they’re standing in a wood-panel bar doing a tacky photo shoot, raising a glass of scotch to themselves.”

This hyper-masculine imagery reappears in “Father Figure,” in which Swift sings, “I’ll be your father figure / I drink that brown liquor / I can make deals with the devil, because my dick’s bigger.”

The song seems to switch back to Swift’s perspective in the bridge

Taylor Swift performs during the Eras Tour in Florida.
Taylor Swift performs during the Eras Tour.

In Swift’s release party film, she says of “Father Figure,” “I can relate to both characters in certain parts of the song.”

Indeed, Swift throws a wrench in the song’s narrative when she launches into the bridge. The singer is no longer addressing an ingenue (defined as a guileless, innocent young woman), but a male adversary.

“I saw a change in you, my dear boy,” Swift sings. “They don’t make loyalty like they used to.”

She continues by chastising this person for his “thoughtless ambition” and “foolish decisions.”

Here, the song seems to switch from the mentor’s perspective to his onetime protégé’s, who has since outgrown (and outearned) him. This mirrors Swift’s decision to leave Big Machine, rerecord her old music, and, eventually, regain control of her masters.

In the final chorus, Swift emerges triumphant: “Mistake my kindness for weakness and find your card canceled / I was your father figure, you pulled the wrong trigger / This empire belongs to me / Leave it with me.”

Representatives for Swift and Borchetta didn’t respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

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