Meier & Frank Building

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The Meier & Frank Building
The Meier & Frank Building

The Meier & Frank Building is a fifteen story, glazed terra cotta building located in downtown Portland, Oregon, across from the northeast corner of Pioneer Courthouse Square. The building is the former flagship store and headquarters building for the Meier & Frank department store chain and is currently closed for remodeling into an updated Macy's department store and a hotel.

The building site is a full block bounded by SW Fifth, Alder, Sixth, and Morrison Streets. The present building was constructed in stages, starting in 1909 with major expansions occurring in 1915 and 1932. It replaces an earlier Meier and Frank store built in 1898.

The project was the first major commission for prolific Portland architect, A. E. Doyle. Although the original commission was an annex to the original building, Doyle took a trip to Chicago with the company's co-founder Sigmund Frank to survey department stores. Frank was very impressed with what he saw, and plans for the building changed into a full-block fully modern department store. Frank's death in 1910 ended those plans and resulted in the building's piecemeal construction.

The building hosted the corporate headquarters of the Meier & Frank chain. After the acquisition of Meier and Frank by May Department Stores in 1967, the chain became a division which was based out of the former corporate offices.

The interior of the building has been modernized over the years with few interior historic elements remaining. However, two noticeable exceptions to this were the Georgian Room restaurant and seasonal Santaland, both on the 10th floor (highest retail floor in the building). The historic Georgian Room had remained virtually unchanged for at least the last 50 years. Santaland, which closed after the 2005 Christmas season, was an annual holiday favorite for generations of Portland families.[citation needed] Santaland operated a "kiddie"-sized overhead monorail around the ceiling of Santaland (also at least 50 years old), a holiday model railroad layout and Santa Clauses.[1]

At its peak, the store housed everything from a pharmacy to a pet store. Several delis and food vendors operated out of various levels. As demand for these services declined, the store changed focus. During the 1980s the store began to concentrate more on soft lines such as clothing, as well as small goods such as housewares. Several floors were modified to serve as corporate offices. Other floors were simply shut down and turned over to cold storage. The store was able to operate in this configuration until finally doomed by the development of the Pioneer Place mall downtown and increased competition from its stores and anchors, Saks Fifth Avenue and Nordstrom.

The building was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[1]

In 2005, the May Company was acquired by Federated Department Stores, corporate parent of Macy's and other chains. The Meier & Frank stores were renamed Macy's in 2006.

In 2006, construction began on a project to turn the top nine floors of the building into a 330-room luxury hotel called The Nines, A Starwood Collection Luxury Hotel.[2] The former Meier & Frank store in the lower floors of the building remained open until December 30, 2006. The ongoing construction and remodel will fit its new identity as an urban Macy's department store. The store is scheduled to reopen in Fall 2007.

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[edit] Trivia

  • Clark Gable worked in the store's tie department in 1922.
  • The building featured the first escalator installation in Portland.
  • A.E. Doyle first used glazed terra-cotta in this building, resulting in his, and other firms', later use of it in many other Portland structures.
  • The building's construction in segments over several decades led to anomalous differences in which elevators and which stairways reached which floors.
  • Pneumatic tubes were used throughout the store to convey messages and money from upper to lower floors and back again. The remnants of this system could still be found in some stairwells and back areas.
  • The building has two primary lower levels and a third service level beneath these. The first lower level was used for retail space until the mid 1980s. The levels beneath that were used for storage and various seasonal needs.
  • The bank of hand-controlled elevators originally operated by store associates were closed off with the construction of new automatic elevators, but continued to function as stock elevators into the 1990's outside of public view.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Oregon National Register List (PDF). State of Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. Retrieved on 2007-02-03.
  2. ^ Sage Hospitality Closes on Purchase of Top Floors in Meier & Frank Building. Portland Development Commission (April 12, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-11-27.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

 

Notable Portland, Oregon architecture
 Skyscrapers: Wells Fargo Center | US Bancorp Tower | KOIN Center | PacWest Center | Fox Tower | Standard Insurance Center | Congress Center | Hatfield U.S. Courthouse | ODS Tower | 1000 Broadway | Union Bank of California Tower | Lloyd Center Tower 

 Other buildings: Meier & Frank Building | Benson Hotel | Commonwealth (Equitable) Building | Portland Public Service Building | Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall | Oregon Convention Center | Union Station | Pittock Mansion | Pioneer Courthouse 
Stadiums: Rose Garden Arena | Memorial Coliseum | PGE Park