Jump to content

Ridpath Club Apartments: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 84: Line 84:
}}
}}


The '''Ridpath Hotel''' is a complex in [[Spokane, Washington]] that is comprised of four buildings – the Ridpath Tower (completed in 1952), the Halliday Building (completed 1964), the Y Building (completed 1906), and the Executive Court building (completed in 1963). The Ridpath Tower, the main portion of the hotel was designed by San Francisco architect Ned Hyman Abrams and is the second iteration of the Ridpath Hotel, after the original building was destroyed by fire in 1950.
The '''Ridpath Hotel''' is a complex in [[Spokane, Washington]] that is comprised of four buildings – the Ridpath Tower (completed in 1952), the Halliday Building (completed 1964), the Y Building (completed 1906), and the Executive Court building (completed in 1963). The Ridpath Tower, the main portion of the hotel, was designed by San Francisco architect Ned Hyman Abrams and is the second iteration of the Ridpath Hotel - the original building was destroyed by fire in 1950.


==History==
==History==
The Ridpath Hotel was established by Colonel William Ridpath, with its original building opened in 1900. The first building suffered through two fires, the first in 1902 (and was subsequently restored), and another in 1950 which damaged the building beyond repair.<ref>{{cite web|title=A Path Unknown|url=http://www.inlander.com/spokane/article-17482-a-path-unknown.html|publisher=Inlander|accessdate=12 March 2012|author=Daniel Walters}}</ref> The original hotel was demolished and a new 12-story tower was constructed in its place, which opened in 1952.
The Ridpath Hotel was established by Colonel William Ridpath in 1899<ref>{{cite news|title=Option Is Taken on Spokane Hotel|accessdate=12 March 2012|newspaper=Spokane Daily Chronicle|date=April 20, 1961}}</ref>, with its original building opening in 1900. The first building suffered through two fires, the first in 1902 (and was subsequently restored), and another in 1950 which damaged the building beyond repair.<ref>{{cite web|title=A Path Unknown|url=http://www.inlander.com/spokane/article-17482-a-path-unknown.html|publisher=Inlander|accessdate=12 March 2012|author=Daniel Walters}}</ref> The fire, which broke out on the evening of February 28, 1950 burned through the night for thirteen hours and caused an estimated $1,000,000 in damages<ref>{{cite news|title=Option Is Taken on Spokane Hotel|accessdate=12 March 2012|newspaper=Spokane Daily Chronicle|date=April 20, 1961}}</ref> to the 5-story building as well as adjacent structures.<ref>{{cite news|title=Ridpath Hotel Fire recalled|accessdate=12 March 2012|newspaper=Spokane Daily Chronicle|date=February 28, 1970|author=Wayne Carlson}}</ref> The original hotel was demolished and a new 12-story tower was constructed in its place, which opened in 1952.
===The new Ridpath Tower===
In June 1950, just a short three months after fire damaged the original Ridpath Hotel beyond repair, construction work began on a replacement: a steel-framed, 250-room, 12-story high building to be called the Ridpath Tower. The building, which was erected on the same site of the old hotel was originally envisioned to be an 8-story building, 200-room hotel.<ref>{{cite news|title=Ridpath Will Add Four Floors for 12-story Structure|accessdate=12 March 2012|newspaper=Spokane Daily Chronicle|date=April 21, 1950}}</ref>

===Decline, sales, and closure===
==Preservation==


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

[[Category:Buildings and structures in Spokane, Washington]]
[[Category:Spokane, Washington]]

Revision as of 10:09, 18 March 2012

Ridpath Hotel
Ridpath Tower in March 2012
Map
Former namesWestCoast Ridpath
Cavanaugh's Ridpath Hotel
General information
Statuscompleted (closed 2008, currently vacant)
Architectural styleModernism
Address515 W Sprague Ave.
Spokane, Washington
Completed1952 (Ridpath Tower)
1906 (Y Building)
1964 (Halliday Building)
1963 (Executive Court Building)
Height130 ft (40 m)[1]
Technical details
Structural systemSteel
Floor count13
Design and construction
Architect(s)Ned Hyman Abrams

The Ridpath Hotel is a complex in Spokane, Washington that is comprised of four buildings – the Ridpath Tower (completed in 1952), the Halliday Building (completed 1964), the Y Building (completed 1906), and the Executive Court building (completed in 1963). The Ridpath Tower, the main portion of the hotel, was designed by San Francisco architect Ned Hyman Abrams and is the second iteration of the Ridpath Hotel - the original building was destroyed by fire in 1950.

History

The Ridpath Hotel was established by Colonel William Ridpath in 1899[2], with its original building opening in 1900. The first building suffered through two fires, the first in 1902 (and was subsequently restored), and another in 1950 which damaged the building beyond repair.[3] The fire, which broke out on the evening of February 28, 1950 burned through the night for thirteen hours and caused an estimated $1,000,000 in damages[4] to the 5-story building as well as adjacent structures.[5] The original hotel was demolished and a new 12-story tower was constructed in its place, which opened in 1952.

The new Ridpath Tower

In June 1950, just a short three months after fire damaged the original Ridpath Hotel beyond repair, construction work began on a replacement: a steel-framed, 250-room, 12-story high building to be called the Ridpath Tower. The building, which was erected on the same site of the old hotel was originally envisioned to be an 8-story building, 200-room hotel.[6]

Decline, sales, and closure

Preservation

References

  1. ^ "WestCoast Ridpath Hotel". Emporis. 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  2. ^ "Option Is Taken on Spokane Hotel". Spokane Daily Chronicle. April 20, 1961. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ Daniel Walters. "A Path Unknown". Inlander. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  4. ^ "Option Is Taken on Spokane Hotel". Spokane Daily Chronicle. April 20, 1961. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  5. ^ Wayne Carlson (February 28, 1970). "Ridpath Hotel Fire recalled". Spokane Daily Chronicle. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  6. ^ "Ridpath Will Add Four Floors for 12-story Structure". Spokane Daily Chronicle. April 21, 1950. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)