
Look up at the soaring rectangular tower on your right, covered in tan terracotta panels with an intricate pale gothic crown and a dark fire escape zig-zagging down its side. This is the Mincks-Adams Hotel, constructed in 1927 by a local businessman named Ike Mincks. Mincks timed his masterpiece perfectly. The 1928 International Petroleum Exposition brought a tidal wave of unimaginable wealth. Well-heeled visitors and ambitious oil barons flocked here from across the globe, desperate for premium accommodations. They fueled a staggering demand for luxury, filling these rooms to the brim.
To build it, Mincks poured in over eight hundred thousand dollars, which is about fourteen and a half million dollars today. If you look at the app, check out the historical detail of this facade. Notice that exquisite terracotta, which is a type of durable baked clay used for elaborate architectural sculpture. It made this one of the most photographed buildings in downtown. Inside, Spanish Colonial tiles dazzled the guests. The Tulsa Press Club eventually set up on the mezzanine, a low intermediate floor just above the main lobby. They installed a wildly lavish bar covered entirely in real leopard skin. That was quite a step up from earlier days when reporters had to buy illegal moonshine at secret Prohibition-era blind tigers.

But the roaring twenties could not roar forever. The spectacular boom of the Petroleum Expo was swiftly obliterated by the catastrophic stock market crash of 1929. The city's tourism evaporated overnight, and business travel ground to a devastating halt. The severe financial strain shattered Ike's dream, forcing him into bankruptcy by 1935. The devastation was absolute. He lost this hotel at a liquidation sale, lost his grand two-story home, and had to retreat into a modest house down the street. This beautiful tower stands as a brilliant gamble that crashed violently into reality.
Decades later, the building fell into total abandonment. The doors were chained shut, and all thirteen floors sat empty and sweltering while nearby blocks found new life. Investors completely ignored it for years due to its awkward location near a transit hub and a local dive bar. Thankfully, developers recently stepped in, spending millions to restore that original terracotta and convert the upper floors into upscale apartments.
After Mincks lost his empire, the new owners renamed it the Adams Hotel, and later tried to brand it the Adams Office Building. Yet, Tulsans stubbornly ignored the rebrand, keeping the Adams Hotel name alive in their daily chatter regardless of what the signs said. It leaves you wondering how strongly a city's history resists being rewritten. The building's management office is open every day from eight to five if you are curious about leasing a modern piece of history. Let's make our way to the Pythian Building, just a three-minute walk from here.


