The building above bears no formal historic designation. Still, it truly is a “landmark” in the dictionary sense of being a prominent feature of a
particular place.
For roughly 40 years,
it helped define Northeast Portland’s Hollywood thriving business district as much as
the grandiose Hollywood Theatre across the street.
The single-story building with basement was the first Fred
Meyer retail store built to the specifications of Fred G. Meyer himself after
World War II. It was the first of three
Meyer one-stop-shopping venues to feature rooftop parking, a concept he no
doubt borrowed from the unsuccessful Portland Public Market that opened
downtown during the Great Depression.
A preliminary design for Meyer’s Hollywood store was
completed in 1936. However, the
Depression and World War II delayed its completion until 1947. Until then, Meyer’s nascent retail empire had
grown through the remodeling of older buildings he purchased during the Depression.
Meyer followed the Hollywood store with a rooftop parking
store at Rose City (now destroyed) and at the Hawthorne store, which still
retains about half of its original upper-level parking. His rooftop parking plans died a few years later when he learned about a faster, cheaper construction process that did not allow the weight of vehicles on the roof.
By the time Meyer died in 1978, his newer suburban stores
were several times larger than the Hollywood store. The company closed the Hollywood store in the
late 1980s after building a far larger emporium a half a mile away on the former
Hyster forklift manufacturing site. For a while, the bigger store was a place you could buy all your food, drugs, clothes, shoes, garden supplies and hardware, in addition to a table saw and a Barbie doll. (Kroger Inc., the current owner, has scaled down the inventory compared to the old days.)
The drug chain Rite Aid renovated the old Fred Meyer
store and operated a pharmacy until moving out last year. The bulk of the building remains vacant,
although a bank and a couple small businesses operate on its edges.
Empty racks and assorted retail debris still clutter the
former Fred Meyer/Rite Aid space. Several
other vacancies dot the Hollywood district as well. What once ranked as one of Portland’s busiest
neighborhood commercial centers is in apparent decline. One of the most notable vacancies is the old
Poor Richard’s steakhouse that enjoyed an ample parking lot. The Poor Richard’s site, just a couple blocks
from the former Fred Meyer store, has sat vacant now for several years.
|
Drive right up...but why? |
Oddly, perhaps, rooftop parking is still available at the
old Hollywood Fred Meyer store. The
monthly fee is $90, should you live in the neighborhood and need a place to
park. It is also possible to walk up the
ramp to get an interesting and rather close-up elevated view of the Hollywood Theatre's amazing terra cotta façade across Sandy Boulevard.
While the fate of contemporary retailing remains heavily in question, the Hollywood business district will remain a shadow of its former self until a successful enterprise reincarnates Fred Meyer's vision from long ago.
---Fred Leeson
Join Building on History’s email list by writing “add me” to
fredleeson@hotmail.com
Would seem to be an ideal location for Aldi whenever they decide to come to Portland.
ReplyDeleteIt might be a successful spot for a New Seasons or Whole Foods location.
ReplyDeleteThe Hollywood Hub being built at the Hollywood Transit Center will bring 222 new apartments within very short walking distance of the old Fred Meyer building by 2026. The units will not have parking, so there will be a ready supply of customers to the retailer that takes over this space. This should also revive many of the currently empty storefronts.
ReplyDelete