United States Customhouse (Portland, Oregon)

U.S. Customhouse
U.S. Custom House, June 2003
Location 220 NW 8th Ave., Portland, Oregon
Coordinates 45°31′30″N 122°40′37″W / 45.52500°N 122.67694°W / 45.52500; -122.67694Coordinates: 45°31′30″N 122°40′37″W / 45.52500°N 122.67694°W / 45.52500; -122.67694
Area less than one acre
Built 1897
Architect Edgar M. Lazarus
Architectural style Italian Renaissance Revival
NRHP Reference # 74001714[1]
Added to NRHP May 2, 1974

The U.S. Customhouse is a historic custom house located at Portland in Multnomah County, Oregon. It was built to house offices of the United States Customs Service. It is currently used as the exterior of the Portland Police Station in NBC's Grimm.[2]

Building history

Fueled by Portland's economic development during the late 19th century, the U.S. Custom House was constructed to accommodate the city’s burgeoning prosperity and status. In 1875, the U.S. Customs Service first established a presence in Portland, moving into the newly constructed U.S. Post Office, Courthouse, and Custom House building (now known as the Pioneer Courthouse). As the city outgrew the space, a new Federal building was planned to house the Customs Service and additional courtrooms. In 1898, construction began on the present U.S. Custom House, reaching completion in 1901.[3]

The building was designed in the office of James Knox Taylor, Supervising Architect of the U.S. Treasury Department, and constructed under the supervision of locally noted architect Edgar M. Lazarus. Lazarus is known for his designs for the Vista House at Crown Point and the Agricultural Palace for the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition (no longer extant). Together, Taylor and Lazarus brought the new Custom House to fruition in a style inspired by the English Renaissance architecture of the 17th and 18th centuries, with similarities to the mannered style that characterized London architect James Gibbs's public architecture.[3]

In 1938, the east and west wings gained fourth floors to accommodate additional office space. In 1968, when the U.S. Customs Service moved into the Old Post Office Building at 511 NW Broadway, the North Pacific Division of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers occupied the building, until they moved to a new location in December 2004. The building's scale and distinguished design aesthetically enhances its neighborhood and serves as an anchor on the margin of the North Park Blocks, a row of seven blocks originally intended as open space in the late 19th century. In 1970, upon the recommendation of the Portland Historic Landmarks Commission, the City Council designated the U.S. Custom House as a Historic Landmark. In 1973, the U.S. Custom House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[1][3]

Current plans

After The International School backed out of acquiring the building for free, the General Services Administration decided to auction off the property, and began accepting bids on May 25, 2010.[4] An investigation showed the building would take $8–10 million in renovations for accessibility and earthquake retrofits.[5][6] Responding to calls for "someone with a vision" to "take on future"[7] of the architectural landmark, contributors to Portland's civic wiki[8] began suggesting possible uses for the site, one of the city's more prominent historical landmarks. The auction's winner, PREM Group, was unable to finalize the purchase, and the building was put back to auction on December 1, 2011.[9] The second auction was won by Eastern Real Estate LLC in March 2012 with a bid of $4.74 million,[10] with the sale finalized in October 2012.[11] In April 2015, WeWork announced plans to expand to Portland, leasing the Custom House for use as shared office space.[12]

Architecture

Custom House building, June 2008

Portland’s U.S. Custom House is a large edifice, encompassing a full block bounded by NW Broadway, Everett and Davis Streets, and Eighth Avenue, near the downtown. The four-story building is symmetrical, H-shaped in plan, featuring pavilions extending to the north and south from the central mass. An elegant one-story granite loggia of five tall, arched openings with rusticated walls and a scrolled parapet encloses the entry courtyard and opens onto Eighth Avenue and the North Park Blocks beyond.[3]

The U.S. Custom House is an exemplary display of the Italian Renaissance Revival style of architecture, exhibiting Baroque and Mannerist features. The building's first-story walls are brick masonry sheathed in light-gray granite, with rusticated joints and quoins at the corners, and are pierced by window and door openings headed with articulated semicircular arches. A continuous granite stringcourse carved with Vitruvian scrolls and a balustrade above divide the first and second floors. The upper stories are composed of Roman brick with terra-cotta detailing and crowned with a dentil cornice molding supported by scrolled consoles. The flanking pavilions are capped with slate-covered pyramidal roofs, prominently featuring two ornamental vent stacks clad in terra cotta atop a rusticated stone base.[3]

A distinctive feature that evokes the interpretative style of the mid-16th-century Italian Mannerist architecture is the ornamentation of the fenestration. This is most prominent with the second- and third-story windows’ display of the "Gibbs surround," which is characterized by keystones and spaced blocks surrounding large windows. Here, this motif is composed of terra-cotta displaying bead and reel decoration, elaborately carved quoins, keystones, and Doric order moldings. Framing the second- and third-story bays of the north and south pavilions are two-story engaged Corinthian columns, supporting a continuous architrave, which is capped with a dentiled cornice and a parapet of alternating brick panels and open balusters.[3]

Italian Renaissance Revival finishes and details are reflected on the interior spaces of the Custom House. Arched doorways, marble-clad piers, and beams with classical plaster moldings define the three bays of the first-floor entry vestibule, extending into the first- floor lobby where they are articulated with groined vaults and paneled arch soffits. Marble wainscoting continues around the room and extends to the spring line. Each story's lobby is similarly treated, but using ascending classical orders – Doric on the first floor, Ionic order on the second, and Corinthian order on the third.[3]

A grand cast-iron stairway extends from the center of the first floor to the fourth floor, featuring marble treads, double balusters with spiral and acanthus ornamentation, paneled stringers and soffits, and a molded oak handrail. Originally, windows at the landings opened into a light court, which was covered with solid panels in 1949, leaving the oak framing and trim intact. The existing vestibule and main stair lobbies are well-preserved spaces which remain as the most detailed and significant areas in the building.[3]

Typically, the office spaces include plaster finishes with oak baseboards, chair rails, and picture moldings. Although initial plans in 1897 called for two-story courtrooms in the large spaces at each end of the central wing at the third floor, these were omitted from the design after construction began in 1900. While the courtroom spaces were simplified, their large, central skylights in the paneled ceilings above were retained. The interiors were rehabilitated in 1977, removing obtrusive firewalls that had been installed in the stairwells. In 1992, GSA undertook an extensive exterior preservation project to clean, repair, and restore the historic building to its original condition.[3]

Significant events

Building facts

References

  1. 1 2 Staff (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. Libby, Brian. ""Grimm" locations: a tour of the unique and historic". Portland Architecture. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "GSA - Find a Building". U.S. Custom House, Portland, OR : Building Overview. U.S. General Services Administration. 2009-08-24.
  4. GSA - Property Disposal - Featured Auctions - Portland Custom House, retrieved 26 May 2010
  5. Frank, Ryan (2010-03-11). "Top 10 (catching up edition): CenterCal halts Bridgeport-style complex in Oregon City". The Oregonian. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  6. Graves, Mark (2009-04-07). "U.S. Custom House may house International School". The Oregonian. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  7. Griffin, Anna (2010-03-30). "Someone with a vision should take on future of Portland's U.S. Custom House". The Oregonian. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
  8. PortlandWiki.org > United States Custom House > Big Ideas, retrieved 26 May 2010
  9. O'Brien, Lindsey (November 22, 2011). "Future of U.S. Custom House looks bleak after deal falls apart". Daily Journal of Commerce. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  10. Culverwell, Wendy (March 14, 2012). "U.S. Custom House buyer steps forward". Portland Business Journal. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  11. Culverwell, Wendy (October 3, 2012). "U.S. Custom House sale closes". Portland Business Journal by Wendy Culverwel. Retrieved October 3, 2012.
  12. Njus, Elliot (April 10, 2015). "Shared office provider WeWork will expand to Portland, take over vacant U.S. Custom House". The Oregonian. Retrieved 13 May 2015.

Attribution

External links

Media related to U.S. Customhouse (Portland, Oregon) at Wikimedia Commons

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