The Lane Building, east facade (my photo)
This
is the next in my Eugene/Architecture/Alphabet series
of blog posts, the focus of each being a landmark building here in Eugene. Many
of these will be familiar to most who live here but there are likely to be a
few buildings that are less so. My selection criteria for each will be
threefold:
- The building must be of architectural interest, local importance, or historically significant.
- The building must be extant so you or I can visit it in person.
- Each building’s name will begin with a particular letter of the alphabet, and I must select one (and only one) for each of the twenty-six letters. This is easier said than done for some letters, whereas for other characters there is a surfeit of worthy candidates (so I’ll be discriminating and explain my choice in those instances).
The Lane
Building
The Lane Building is located at 488 Willamette Street in downtown Eugene just south of the Southern Pacific Railroad depot (today Eugene’s Amtrak Station) and across the street from the Oregon Electric Railway Passenger Station. George G. Gross, a realtor and founder of the Willamette Valley Land Company, developed the three-story wood-framed building as a hotel in 1903, capitalizing upon its convenience to intercity rail service. He immodestly named the hotel after himself. Gross sold it in 1908, whereupon it became in succession the Griggs Hotel, the Hotel Lane, the Palace Hotel, and eventually the Lane Building. The historic structure is no longer a hotel, but it thrives today recognizably close to its original form, accommodating a variety of offices and small businesses.
I do remember finding the Lane Building distinctive
upon first seeing it. That was back in 1980 when I arrived in Eugene to study
at the University of Oregon. My wife and I would later frequent it when the Monster Cookie Company operated a storefront shop there. What struck me about the Lane Building was that it appeared quite
old. Its plain, relatively unadorned construction and wrap-around wood porch/veranda
suggested an archaic, bygone era to me. In truth, the Lane Building’s
vintage is not especially remarkable, as a handful of surviving buildings,
including the nearby Smeede Hotel, are older. Regardless, the Lane Building
stood out then and remains today a singular example of its type in Eugene.
The Lane Building is located at 488 Willamette Street in downtown Eugene just south of the Southern Pacific Railroad depot (today Eugene’s Amtrak Station) and across the street from the Oregon Electric Railway Passenger Station. George G. Gross, a realtor and founder of the Willamette Valley Land Company, developed the three-story wood-framed building as a hotel in 1903, capitalizing upon its convenience to intercity rail service. He immodestly named the hotel after himself. Gross sold it in 1908, whereupon it became in succession the Griggs Hotel, the Hotel Lane, the Palace Hotel, and eventually the Lane Building. The historic structure is no longer a hotel, but it thrives today recognizably close to its original form, accommodating a variety of offices and small businesses.
- Low-pitched hipped or sometimes flat roofs, especially on commercial buildings.
- Projecting eaves with decorative brackets.
- An attempt to capture in available materials the look of Italian Renaissance palazzos and villas.
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