The Coca-Cola Bottling Plant is a historic manufacturing facility in the Evanston neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Constructed in the 1930s in high Streamline Moderne style, it no longer produces beverages, but has been named a historic site.
The Coca-Cola Company ordered construction of the present building in the Evanston neighborhood during the Great Depression,[2] It was completed in 1938.
Renovations quickly began, with extra space used for offices and rented to Cincinnati Country Day School after one of its buildings collapsed.
Hundreds of locations in Cincinnati are listed on the National Register, but the bottling plant's status was exceptional due to its young age; it was only about forty years old when designated,[1] and buildings younger than fifty years old can only qualify for designation in the most exceptional circumstances.