Troy Laundry Building (Portland, Oregon)
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Troy Laundry Building | |
Portland Historic Landmark[1] | |
Location | 1025 SE Pine Street Portland, Oregon |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45°31′15″N 122°39′19″W / 45.520954°N 122.655196°W |
Built | 1913 |
Architect | Ellis F. Lawrence |
Architectural style | Colonial Revival |
MPS | Portland Oregon’s Eastside Historic and Architectural Resources, 1850-1938 |
NRHP reference No. | 89000102 |
Added to NRHP | March 8, 1989 |
The Troy Laundry building, located at 1025 South East Pine in Portland, Oregon is a mixture of Colonial, Egyptian, and Renaissance revival architecture. It has large windows, tall brick walls, and decorative brickwork. It was built by Portland architect Ellis F. Lawrence.
Architecture
The Troy Laundry building is classified as Colonial Revival[2] but it features characteristics of other architectural styles as well. The towering brickwork with the tall, double-layered windows, as well as the decorative brickwork in even intervals, are an example of the variation in architectural style. Renaissance revival architecture drew inspiration from a wide range of classical Italian modes.[3] Nineteenth-century architects and critics gained inspiration from early fifteenth-century expression artwork and architecture, and also included styles such as Baroque and Mannerism. The divergent forms of Renaissance architecture in different parts of Europe make it difficult to define and recognize new, or Neo-Renaissance, architecture.
The building also shows aspects of Egyptian Revival architecture, which often incorporates the motifs and imagery of ancient Egypt into the building's design.[4] High stone walls and angular features are also central to this style. The angular wall faces and design of the upper portions of the Troy Laundry building are excellent depictions of such stylistic choice. Public awareness is often attributed to Napoleon's conquest of Egypt and the defeat of the French Navy at the Battle of the Nile in 1798. Even during Napoleon's scientific expedition in Egypt reflected by the monumental size of their architecture is noted in the publication of the trip.[5]
Colonial Revival architecture can be attributed to angular brickwork, small stacked windows, and symmetrical features, all of which can be seen on the Troy Laundry Building. Colonial Revival style is often associated with Centennial Exhibitions, which reawakened Americans to the architectural traditions of the colonial past.[6] It wasn't until 1910 that the Colonial Revival movement really took in American society, where forty per cent of United States homes built during the subsequent twenty-year period were built in this style.
History
The Troy Laundry Company
The Troy Laundry was established in the year 1889 by John F. Tait. Mr. Tait came to Portland from Scotland, where he had apprenticed in the laundry trade.[7] His knowledge of the business and his spectacular management skills led to the establishment of a successful and long running laundry business in the city of Portland. The original Troy Laundry building was located on the west side of the river, but was destroyed by a fire in 1984. After the fire, Mr. Tait moved the laundry into a building on the east side of town.[8] In 1892, Tait ran advertisements for the laundry which showed how large his operation was; he even had places where laundry could be picked up throughout Portland, Vancouver, and Oregon City. Troy Laundry was one of two large laundries which catered to both commercial and individual clients.[9] Within twenty five years, his staff increased to over one hundred fifty people. By 1913, the laundry had outgrown its earlier building, and a new Troy Laundry building was built at the corner of 10th and Pine. Tait was one of the first people in the laundry industry to switch to an eight-hour work day. The new building incorporated a variety of innovative features: a large employee dining room and lounge, its own electrical generators, new engines that ran forty-four washers, and twenty-two extractors. When built, it had the standard oil burner dryers, steam equipment, and also housed drying systems like the tumbler - this technology was considered revolutionary at the time. Mr. Tait's system allowed his business to handle over six hundred thousand dollars worth of work a week. His business represented a customer base of ten thousand residential, industrial, and commercial clients.
Ellis F. Lawrence
Ellis F. Lawrence was born in Malden, Massachusetts in 1879.[10] He received his Bachelor's and Master's degrees in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which was the first school of architecture in the United States. After graduating in 1902, Lawrence worked for three architectural firms: Codman and Despradelle; Andrews Jacques and Rantoul; and John Calvin Stevens. Lawrence was greatly influenced by his work with Despradelle, his former studio instructor, as well as John Calvin Stevens. In 1906 Lawrence headed west where he intended to open an office in San Francisco. He stopped in Portland, Oregon along the way to visit a friend and former M.I.T graduate. It was then that Lawrence decided to move to Portland. He joined his friend E.B. McNaughton and engineer Henry Raymond in partnership in November 1906.[11] Lawrence was their chief designer. In February 1910, Lawrence left the firm to pursue independent work until 1913 when a former classmate and friend from M.I.T. William G. Holdford joined him in a partnership. Ormond Bean and Fred Allyn joined that partnership in 1928. Bean left the firm in 1933, and both Allyn and Holdford left in 1940.
Lawrence's first design in Portland was his home located in the Irvington neighborhood of Northeast Portland. In 1914 Lawrence founded the University of Oregon School of Architecture and Allied Arts in Eugene, Oregon. He organized the school around teaching methods which rejected the traditional philosophy. He believed in the integration of all the arts. Lawrence eventually became acquainted with many of the Portland’s most influential businessmen; Like John Tait. He also knew many nationally known figures such as Frank Lloyd Wright, and the Olmstead brothers. [12]
[1] “University of Oregon Libraries.” University of Oregon Libraries, library.uoregon.edu/architecture/oregon/lawrence
Further reading
- K. Zisman; J. Koler; J. Morrison; B. Grimala; A. Yost (August 15, 1988). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Troy Laundry Building" (pdf). National Park Service.
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See also
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Southeast Portland, Oregon
- Wong Laundry Building
- Yale Union Laundry Building
- Intrinsic Ventures
References
- ^ Portland Historic Landmarks Commission (July 2014), Historic Landmarks -- Portland, Oregon (XLS), retrieved September 10, 2014.
- ^ United States Department of the Interior; National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. Troy Laundry Building. Federal Register No.: 10024-0018 (January 27, 1989)
- ^ Roth, Leland M., and Amanda C. R. Clark. American Architecture: a History. Routledge, 2019.
- ^ Roth, Leland
- ^ McAlester, V., Matty, S. P., & amp; Clicque, S. (2018). A field guide to American houses: The definitive guide to identifying and understanding America's domestic architecture. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
- ^ Roth, Leland
- ^ United States Department of the Interior; National Register of Historic Places Registration form. Troy Laundry Building. Federal Register No.: 10024-0018 (January 27, 1989)
- ^ Ellis Fuller Lawrence Papers, 1909-1929 PDF.” Archives West: Ellis Fuller Lawrence Papers, 1909-1929, archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv35243.
- ^ Dept. of Interior
- ^ Ellis Fuller Lawrence Papers
- ^ University of Oregon Libraries.” The University of Oregon Libraries, library.uoregon.edu/architecture/oregon/lawrence
- ^ National Register of Historic Places; Multiple Property Documentation Form. The architecture of Ellis F. Lawrence. Federal Register No.: 1024-0018 (September 04, 1990)