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Built in 1928, this Tudor Revival apartment building is an outstanding example of Portland architect Roscoe D. Hemenway's work in period revival styles during the 1920s through the 1950s. It is one of very few multi-unit residences he produced. [f] [51] 91: Lewis and Elizabeth Van Vleet House
The Trinity Place Apartments, located in northwest Portland, Oregon, is acknowledged by the National Register of Historic Places. [4]An unreinforced masonry building, placing it at high risk of collapse in a major earthquake, the 46,000-square-foot (4,300 m 2) building was given a $1.3 million full seismic retrofit, in phases over a period of a few years, concluding in 2017.
Portland was the site of an 1872 fatal train wreck. A genealogical history of Portland was published in 1873 by Dr. H. C. Taylor, titled Historical Sketches of the Town of Portland, New York . An all names index was created for this book by Agnes Lee Mitchell in 1989 and published by the Chautauqua County Genealogical Society.
The West Tower of the Harrison Tower Apartments, a modernist building reminiscent of New York City housing projects, was tallest from 1965-1969. [9] The Union Bank Tower, followed by the Standard Insurance Center, both International style office buildings, were tallest for less than one year and two years, respectively. [10] [11]
Tudor Arms Apartments may refer to: Tudor Arms Apartments (Portland, Oregon), listed on the NRHP in Northwest Portland, Oregon; Tudor Arms Apartments (Baltimore, Maryland), a historic cooperative apartment building in Wyman Park, Baltimore; The Tudor Arms, also known as The Rae Flats and The Raleigh, historic apartment buildings in Buffalo, New ...
The five-story building was completed in 1915. [2] It has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1994. [3] The nineteenth-century Tudor Revival/Jacobethan style architecture was designed by noted Portland architect Carl L. Linde. It was built by R. F. Wassel, who was also from Portland. [4]
Jeanne Manor Apartment Building, Portland, 1931; ... "New Deal Map". The Living New Deal. Retrieved 2020-12-25. "SAH Archipedia". Society of Architectural Historians.