Built by a group of investors led by Charles A. Fisk, president of the Amarillo Bank and Trust, the ten-story Fisk Building features a tall ground floor faced in cream-colored terra-cotta with five lancet windows in each bay. Above, seven stories of red brick are bare of ornament, while the top two stories are overlaid with terra-cotta details of a Prairie Style character, reflecting Carlander’s Chicago education. The Fisk Building was rehabilitated in 2011 as a 107-room hotel, the largest private investment in the downtown in forty years, and a federal historic tax credit project. Only slivers of the original terrazzo floors survive on the interior.
Guy Anton Carlander (1888–1975) was raised in Kansas and graduated from the Chicago Art Institute in 1913. He worked as an inspector for the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad in the Southwest, where he designed numerous passenger stations. Carlander moved to Amarillo, where he established his practice in 1920.