Romania Building, Franklin Boulevard side (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 Romania Building at 2020 Franklin Boulevard is perhaps Eugene’s best-known (if not best-preserved) example of 1950s-style “Googie” architecture. Its elliptical plan, sweeping “potato chip” roof, and once expansive glass walls are characteristic of the futuristic Googie designs—many of which employed gravity-defying cantilevers, bold geometric shapes, and vibrant colors—that exuberantly celebrated the car-centric culture of the era. Located as it was and is at the east end of Franklin Boulevard, the building functioned as a gateway and symbol of the city’s rapidly expanding transportation infrastructure and commercial development upon its opening in 1960. Though its original dynamism is a thing of the past, current plans promise new life for the forlorn structure.
Photo from the National Register of Historic Places (https://www.flickr.com/photos/nationalregister/6035198053/in/photostream/Lew Williams Chevrolet Dealership | Eugene, Lane County, OR … | Flickr)
Lew
Williams sold the business to Joe Romania in 1969 (Joe was general manager of
the dealership under Lew). What grew to become the Romania group of car
dealerships was a force on the local scene when I first arrived in Eugene in
1980, and it remained so up until the time the Romania family sold the land and buildings its Chevrolet
dealership occupied to the University of Oregon in 2005. Since purchasing the strategically
important location, the university repurposed the 4.0-acre site for storage and
parking use, with the former showroom serving for a while as studio space for its
Product Design program.As of 2011, the showroom has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. According to the listing, the display pavilion “served to attract customers driving along Franklin Boulevard with its modern, futuristic, and aerodynamic design.” Notably, the dealership was the first to be situated outside of Eugene’s downtown core, which no longer can boast any such businesses.
I
believe the Project^ proposal for the Romania site is proceeding (someone
correct me if I’m mistaken, and it is instead stillborn). The rendering shown
here hints at its large scope, which will entail a mixed-use development, the centerpiece
of which will be the former automobile display pavilion, returned to its former
glory, perhaps functioning as a restaurant. If the entire plan is realized, the
project will be the type of neighborhood node improvement called for by the
City of Eugene’s Walnut Station Specific Area Plan.
Safeguarding
the Romania Building’s historical significance while embracing an opportunity
for sustainable growth and development makes sense, so I’m hopeful the
University of Oregon’s partnership with Project^ will move forward along the
lines of the vision presented. This community hasn’t been the best when it
comes to preserving its architectural heritage. With luck, the
Romania Building will be fully restored and again be the captivating presence
along Franklin Boulevard it once was.
4 comments:
Hi, I am really interested in the old Coca-Cola bottling facility and was wondering if you knew more about it.
Anonymous: I do not know any more about the history of the building other than it was home to the Coca-Cola facility back in the 1950s. I'm not sure when it was originally built.
No worries, thank you. Do you know of any resources I could use to try and dig in to this?
Unfortunately, I am not aware of any additional resources. My apologies for not being more helpful.
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