|
Arcoa additions seen from SE 7th and Yamhill (Ink:Built Architecture) |
For 25 years or so, little seemed to change in Portland’s
least known National Historic District that includes about 20 blocks along a
spine of Southeast Grand Avenue.
Now pandemic nowithstanding, the East Portland Grand Avenue
Historic District is buzzing with renovations and plans for major new buildings. New buildings are not designed to not look ersatz “old” but are intended to fit the context of the district by
taking design cues from nearby historic buildings.
The latest is an eight-story addition to the Arcoa Building
(originally built in 1907 and operated as the U.S. Laundry) at 1006 S.E. Grand
Ave. Plans approved by the Portland
Historic Landmarks Commission show what will appear to be three buildings but
in fact are all tied into one – as well as being tied into the Arcoa Building.
One must look at the image above to see what’s
happening. What looks like two buildings
with separate entrances and retail spaces will face on S.E. 7th Ave. One will look like eight stories and the
other will look like seven stories with a penthouse. This is actually one building with six floors
of apartments and the eighth floor being offices. An entry will be off Yamhill Street for 31
ground-floor parking spaces tucked inside.
|
Arcoa Building, left, with sidecar (Ink:Built Architecture) |
Through the block on Grand, a two-story “sidecar” building
will abut the Arcoa and provide access to the upper floors of the Arcoa. At the same time, it is tied to the
eight-story structure immediately behind the sidecar.
If this sounds complicated, so too was the design. Ink Built Architects held two advisory meetings
with the landmarks commission, followed by two formal hearings to wrestle
through the many options for exterior design, materials, colors and
windows.
Like the new Grand Belmont apartments on the adjacent block
(see below) the Arcoa additions will increase housing units in a district that
formerly was dominated by commercial and industrial uses. More housing will be added, too, by a new
building that will adjoin the remodeled historic Troy Laundry building in a
project described on this blog last August.
Another major eight-story office addition to the historic district, the
Flatworks Building, was approved last September but construction has yet to
start.
|
Grand Belmont Apartments, left, Arcoa Building right |
Now, after a delay due to the pandemic, renovation is
continuing rapidly at the former Gayosa/Chamberlain/Schleifer building that is
being substantially remodeled into a boutique hotel.
Substantial work remains to be completed inside the French
Second Empire building erected in 1907, but the exterior is largely finished. A tall blade sign, Hotel Grand Stark, was installed recently. A portion of the former Schleifer furniture
sign that was finally removed sits on the sidewalk in the image below. The Schleifer store used the former hotel
from 1936 until 2016.
|
Hotel Grand Stark
|
All three of the structures shown above have ground-floor spaces intended for commercial uses or restaurants. It will take survival of the pandemic to determine whether the buildings are successful in attracting tenants that could add vibrancy to the historic district.
I have always admired that French 2nd Empire building on Grand. I always thought that it was much older though. 1860-1890 was the style's hayday. I wonder if there might have been some sort of special French connection either personal, or commercial between the original owner and the French Republic to build an aggressively French style building in 1907? Interesting to speculate..
ReplyDelete