| Stories | Units | Bath | Bedrooms | Unit Size | Price |
| N/A | N/A | 1 | 197 - 395 sq.ft. | $450 - $550 | |
| N/A | N/A | 1 | 1 | 450 - 550 sq.ft. | $599 - $899 |
| N/A | N/A | 2 | 2 | 700 sq.ft. | $799 - $1,099 |
The historic Ambassador Apartments once a nationally known hotel is now on the National Register of Historic Buildings in Kansas City. It was built in 1913 by the first female architect Nelle Peters, and is now under new ownership and management and will be undergoing a complete facelift in the months to come! Nelle E. Peters (1884-1974) Architectural Records (KC0041) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nelle Peters, one of Kansas City`s most prolific architects, was born Nelle Nichols in Niagara, North Dakota. She attended Buena Vista College at Storm Lake, Iowa, and having an innate interest and ability in drawing, she determined to become an architect. Though she lacked technical training, she persisted seeking employment in the architectural offices in Sioux City, Iowa, until Frank Colby, of Eisentraut, Colby, and Pottenger gave her a job on a bet with his partner. She became a `draftslady` with the firm and stayed six years. Nelle Nichols gained valuable on the job training, but also studied through correspondence schools, and was able to gain architectural licenses from several states. About 1907, Miss Nichols was sent by the firm to their Kansas City office, managed by Ernest O. Brostrom. In 1909, she left Eisentraut , Colby, and Pottenger to establish her own office. In 1911, she married William H. Peters, a designer for the Kansas City Terminal Railroad. For ten years she was effectively in retirement, but after her divorce in 1923, Nelle Peters again worked actively in her profession. In the first five years of her renewed practice, she was the architect for nearly 1000 buildings. Her work included structures in Tulsa and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Columbia, Clinton, Boonville, and Jefferson City, Missouri; Nashville, North Carolina; Newark, New Jersey; and Columbus, Ohio. Except for two periods of illness, Ms. Peters remained an active architect until retirement in 1965.

