An imposing house built in 1907 that has devolved into a neighborhood eyesore might thrive again as a residence a few blocks
north of its current home.
An Irvington couple, whose house they were restoring on N.E.
9th Avenue collapsed during a fire late last year, hope to move the much-abused
1907 house to the the vacant lot created by the fire. The move would transport the Craftsman-era
house from NE 9th and Weidler St. to its new location about 4 1/2 blocks away.
The short distance means less moving expense. Still, it will require dropping several power
lines standing in the way and will necessitate a strategy for minimizing damage
to street trees that are heavily protected under city tree-canopy
regulations.
The proposed move has survived a preliminary city intake
examination. If all goes well, the move
could occur this summer. If the move is
successful, one hopes that the first order of business will be a new exterior
paintjob to replace the current graffiti abuse.
The home has been vacant and the windows boarded up for at
least a few years. Graffiti
scoundrels appear to have had free reign ever since.
Squatters have plundered the interior of its hardware and
much of its wiring, but much of the original interior woodwork remains intact,
according to an article in the Irvington Community Association’s newsletter.
If the move is successful, the 1907 house would be a good
fit in the Irvington National Historic District. Many of its neighboring houses are of the
same vintage, making it a good aesthetic fit at the proposed location.
The fate of the 1907 house in its current location was
essentially sealed in the 1950s, when the City of Portland coverted NE Weidler
and Broadway into a one-way couplet.
That sandwiched the house between two high-density traffic
arterials. At roughly the same time, the
city changed zoning in the Lloyd Center area to commercial from residential,
dooming houses sooner or later to being converted or demolished.
People often wonder why historic houses are not moved to new
sites when threatened. One answer is a scarcity of vacant single-family lots;
the other is that the length of can a move can push costs into the prohibitive zone,
given difficulties with power lines and trees.
A successful move in this case would be good news for the house and good news for beiong a compatible addition to its neighborhood.
----Fred Leeson
Join Building on History’s mailing list by writing “add me”
to fredleeson@hotmail.com
" People often wonder why historic houses are not loved to new sites... ." I presume you meant "moved" but what you typed has a certain resonance.
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