Behind any successful architectural preservation project stands someone with extraordinary passion, dedication and perseverance. Without commitment, preservation doesn’t
happen.
Jack Chandler is a prime example. Back in 2007, he noticed a two-story wooden
building dating to 1891 at the southern edge of the Kerns neighborhood. The old store with living quarters above was
listing some 22 degrees off center and the City of Portland wanted to demolish
it.
Chandler had other ideas.
He liked the idea of living above a business and he liked the old
building and the history it represented as a neighborhood store through few
different iterations. Relying on his background in construction management, he
spent the next three years straightening and repairing the structure and
revamping the plumbing and electricity.
Architecturally, the two-story building is the kind of
carpenter-built structure often found on the western American frontier where
wood was the most common and available building material. The flat frontage is topped with a simple
bracketed cornice; the walls are clad with dutch lap siding.
With renovation complete, Chandler opened Oblique Coffee
Roasters at 3039 SE Stark St., in 2010, roasting beans and selling individual
drinks in a pleasant environment filled with a smattering of antiques and an
oaken piano from 1903. The original fir
floor bears the patina and charm of its age.
Chandler took the name “oblique” from the slant of the
building as he found it. But you only
see the name on a small a-frame sign near the door. Chandler restored the original store’s name
on the large “Wm. Landauer” grocery sign painted on the eastern façade.
As it was for many small businesses, the three-year pandemic
was tough on Oblique’s business. “There
was no way I could see that coming,” Chandler said. Because the building predates Portland’s
zoning code, it is grandfathered as a commercial use in a residential
neighborhood. Alas, that also means
there are no nearby businesses that might attract coffee drinkers to it; Oblique’s
most frequent customers are pedestrians enjoying the neighborhood.
Still, Chandler has no regrets. “I love the building. I want to own it
forever,” he said recently.
Chandler has enjoyed the coffee business. But in a city with some 200 individual coffee
roasters and many better-known coffee houses, running Oblique is no straight
line to financial success. Chandler at some point conceivably could lease the storefront for another commercial use, while still living upstairs.
If you’re in the neighborhood, take time for some good
coffee in a novel, charming environment.
If Jack is behind the counter, thank for a job well done restoring a
historic piece of the city.
--Fred Leeson
Join Building on History’s email list by writing “add me”
to fredleeson@hotmail.com
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