1927 | 1301 South Elgin Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma | Well known local businessman, Charles Page hired architect Bruce Goff, because he was already well known for his art deco buildings in Tulsa. Page asked Goff to design a concrete-framed, fireproof warehouse at 1301 S. Elgin. Like other industrial buildings designed by Goff in Tulsa, the Midwest Equitable Meter Company and the Guaranty Laundry Warehouse, this building featured several unique art deco elements and was known to be the storage house for Tulsa’s wealthy elite. It had two vaults: one for jewelry, and another for rugs and larger items. It also was said to be the largest place for fur storage in the Southwest. The Page Warehouse was destroyed for highway development in 1977 but the owner of the Guaranty Laundry and Page Moving Company, Ron Page, still tells tall tales of the fortress of a building and how the elites of Tulsa used the facility to store expensive objects, like cars and pianos while they went on vacation, leaving their homes behind.