135 NW Park Ave.
The handwriting is on the wall – er, in the windows – for two
old brick buildings at 105 and 135 NW Park Ave. on the western edge of the
North Park Blocks. The bureaucratic
wording on the public notices posted in the windows can be translated thusly: “Adios.”
It doesn’t take an expert to look at gentrification of
nearby blocks to see what’s coming next even though there has been no public
disclosure yet: More stories, more
housing, and ground-floor retail on a full block frontage along Park between
Couch and Davis Streets.
Separate owners of 105 N.W. Park, erected in 1921, and the
taller 135 N.W. Park, built in 1911, have asked the city to remove those
buildings from the city’s historic resource inventory. The inventory, made by the city in 1984 and
never since updated, suggested that these two buildings would be eligible for
some category of landmark status that would encourage preservation. No such designations were ever achieved.
105 NW Park Ave
Removal from the inventory at the owners’ requests are
essentially automatic. After 120 days of
public notice, a decision is made without any public comment by the director of
the city’s Bureau of Development Services. The 120 days expire in mid-October.
Neither building amounts to great historic architecture. However, both represent solid, carefully-constructed
commercial buildings of the early 20th Century.
Architects might call them “fabric” buildings -- structures that reflected the early North Park
Blocks neighborhood with its mixed commercial and light industrial uses.
The taller building was designed by the firm of Bennes and Herzog in what the historical inventory describes as "brick utiltarian" style. John Virginius Bennes was a prolific architect best remembered today for several buildings he designed at Oregon State University. OSU has been doing an excellent job restoring several of them, which are included in a National Historic District on campus. Bennes' firm also did the ornate Hollywood Theater in Northeast Portland and some Art-Deco themed apartment buildings.
No demolition applications for these two buildings have been
submitted yet. But the strategy is
obvious. All tenants have departed. Had the buildings remained on the
historic inventory, a demolition application would have required a 120-day
delay to consider renovation, relocation or salvage of materials. No such consideration is needed once the
historic inventory status is removed.
Voila!
It is highly probable that removal from the historic
inventory is a condition of sale of these two properties to a third party with
development in mind. Identity of the
prospective new owner is not yet known, but likely will be after the 120 days expire.
What one could call gentrification of the North Park Blocks
is in some ways a “tale of two cities” in Portland. All the blocks ostensibly were donated to the
city by early-day pioneers as a single, continuous stretch. However, disputes over land deeds allowed
several intervening blocks in downtown to be sold for buildings, rather than
used as parks, thus creating the separate South Park Blocks and North Park Blocks.
The South Park Blocks early on attracted a few elegant
mansions and several churches as immediate neighbors, followed later by
cultural institutions and what became Portland State University. Some high-rise apartments dating from the
1920s and later also chose the South Park Blocks as “home.”
The development pattern was much different in the North Park
Blocks. The area was populated with
small, working-class residences toward the end of the 19th Century, followed by
commercial and light industrial buildings in the 20th Century. For decades, the park found itself sandwiched
between rail yards to the west and the “north end” drug and vice realm north of
Burnside Street into the 1950s.
New buildings to the south
New Hampton Inn at NW Everett
But now the rail yards have been transformed into the Pearl. You find an eight-story new hotel at Everett Streetthat regrettably puts its back door facing the park. The old "north end" isn't the vice haven it once was. Walking the North Park Blocks today and seeing new buildings
erected in the designated central commercial zone makes it clear that the 21st
Century will be different in the North Park Blocks.
Will the overall result be better? That will an interesting
conversation. Not in dispute: It will be
different.
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