(Emerick Architects)The historic Anna Mann Old Peoples’ Home on 3.1 acres in
Northeast Portland appears headed for a major transformation into a low-income
community with 128 apartments. If
successful, the plan would restore an excellent vintage building and provide an
important societal housing benefit.
The plans by Innovative Housing Inc., a non-profit housing
developer and management firm, would create new apartments in the Anna Mann
House, erected in 1910, and add two new buildings on the eastern and southern edges
of the property, located at 1021 N.E. 33rd Ave.
“It’s a high priority for us to save old buildings and keep
their integrity,” said Julie Garver, housing development director for IHI. The agency has renovated three historic
buildings with apartments in Old Town, addition to the Clifford Apartments in
Southeast Portland.
The original Anna Mann building was designed by Whitehouse
and Fouilhoux, one of Portland’s most prominent firms of the era. Their other notable work of the period
included the University Club and Lincoln High School, now Lincoln Hall at Portland
State University, and Jefferson High School.
The style of the Anna Mann house is considered Tudor Revival
or English Elizabethan. Notable elements
include brick walls, steeply pitched roofs, prominent gables,and cast stone lintels and sills at
the windows. The public rooms were
trimmed with dark-stained Douglas fir, a common treatment for Arts and Crafts
interiors in the Portland area.
Pleasingly, those interior details have been well-preserved. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.
Wings were added the first building in 1953 and 1993. Under plans by Emerick Architects, the
original building and wings will be renovated into 39 apartments. The original elderly residents were housing
in single rooms with bathrooms down the halls.
Those single rooms will be reconfigured into apartments, Garver
said.
A narrow new building abutting the eastern edge of the
property would contain 49 units, and the new building on the south side would
add 40 more. The plans call for 71
parking spaces.
Despite the sizable building additions to the property,
space is reserved for a gazebo/picnic area and two grassy play areas. Trees and foliage would buffer the northern
boundary along Sandy Boulevard.
The project is aimed at the difficult challenge of providing
housing for low-income families. Of the
128 apartments, 42 would be targeted for residents earning less than 30 percent
of the region’s median family income.
The remaining 86 units are intended for families earning less than 60
percent of the median income. Sixty-six
apartments will have one bedroom, followed by 48 with two, 13 with three and
one with four bedrooms.
Anna Mann was the wife of a successful Portland real estate
entrepreneur Peter John Mann, who died in 1908.
The couple had purchased land to build a charitable home for the elderly
just before his death. Anna Mann pressed
ahead with the project tin his memory.
It opening it to its first residents in January, 1911.
(Emerick Architects)The goal of the home was to provide single rooms for elderly
residents, as well as attractive rooms for meetings and dining. Garver said the intent of the renovation of
the original building is to retain the stylish woodwork that adds a warm
attractiveness to the Tudor interiors.
The home remained in operation until 1982, when financial
issues led to its closure. The building
served later as an alcoholic rehabilitation center and later as the Movement
Center, a home for yoga and meditation.
The Movement Center sold the building earlier this year to Innovative
Housing.
Garver said the Movement Center took good care of the
building for more than 25 years and cooperated with Innovative Housing in
arranging financing for the sale. Innovative Housing hopes to file building
permits late this year and begin renovation and construction in mid- 2021. She estimates the project will take 20 months
to complete.
The Anna Mann property sits in the Kerns neighborhood, but
abuts Laurelhurst. Garver said both
neighborhood associations favor the Innovative Housing plan.
Oh how beautiful!!! I lived there for 17 years. What a special and loved place/home.
ReplyDeleteCreating low income housing with a historic property is a wonderful idea. Re: Anna Mann property. Do not lower the ceilings . That creates a motel feel and compromises the historical on integrity.
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ReplyDeleteWhen will prospective renters be able to apply?
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