HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES. Please send completed form to: National Register and State Register Coordinator,

Similar documents
HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES. Please send completed form to: National Register and State Register Coordinator,

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES. Please send completed form to: National Register and State Register Coordinator,

Chapter 8: BEACH SOUTH OF ATLANTIC AVENUE NEIGHBORHOOD PLANNING AREA ANALYSIS

handling). The information will be reviewed and verified by the Commission at its next regular meeting, then forwarded to Ould Colony Artisans.

THE CITY OF LAKE FOREST HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION LOCAL LANDMARK NOMINATION INSTRUCTIONS

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

Analysis of Environs of 1000 New York Street, German Methodist Episcopal Church

WINDSOR GLEN DESIGN GUIDELINES

History of the Foundation Buildings and Landscapes

New York Deco. What Makes A New York Building Art Deco? this presentation was designed to offer a basic understanding of new york art deco

Chapter 6.2: Commercial Architectural Styles

Resolution : Exhibit A. Downtown District Design Guidelines March 2003

Page 1 of 19 URBAN DESIGN FRAMEWORK FOR BOLTON STREET WATERFORD

IMPORTANT NOTICE. Architectural Inventory Form COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY I. IDENTIFICATION th Street 5WL.5601

Video: Form and Space in Architecture

Chapter 2, Section C: Urban Design and Visual Resources A. INTRODUCTION

Architectural Inventory Form

Ottawa Historic Resources Inventory: Commercial Historic District Building Information. Significance and Potential Eligibility

SECTION TWO: Overall Design Guidelines

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

CHAPTER 3 DOWNTOWN COMMERCIAL DISTRICT CHARACTER AREA

Policies and Code Intent Sections Related to Town Center

Historic District Commission Staff Report May 3 rd, 2017

GAMMAGE SQUARE - RECOMMENDATIONS

Lancaster Conservation Area Appraisal. Character Area 8. Cathedral

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08)

Hockessin Community Redevelopment Plan

M E M O R A N D U M PLANNING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT CITY OF SANTA MONICA PLANNING DIVISION

Urban Design Brief Woodland Cemetery Funeral Home 493 Springbank Drive

Clairtrell Area Context Plan

The NWX Colonial Revival Style

Morgan s Subdivision Historic District Character-defining Features

9 BUILDINGS BY GUNNAR BIRKERTS PROPOSAL FOR A STUDY TOUR

VIRGINIA BEACH HISTORICAL REGISTER NOMINATION/APPLICATION FORM

2bPlanning Scheme. Appendix. Conservation - Removal of Structures. Grangegorman

Table of Contents. Elm Avenue Improvement Plan City of Waco, Texas. Introduction 1. Existing Context 1 Figure 1 2.

THE AVENUES HERITAGE CONSERVATION DISTRICT STUDY BUILDING INVENTORY SHEET

EXCELSIOR SPRINGS HISTORIC RESOURCES 10

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

Historic District Commission

Trinomial NRHP Status Code Other Listings Review Code Reviewer Date

Baker Historic District

PROJECT SITE The Proposed Project includes the Allen and Pike Street malls between Delancey and South Streets (see Figure 2C-1).

Freeport Bridge Score: 78

Part D. College Avenue Campus PAGE 121 UNIVERSITY OF REGINA / CAMPUS MASTER PLAN 2011

This Review Is Divided Into Two Phases:

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN REVIEW ORDINANCE DESIGN GUIDELINES DECEMBER 2000 PREPARED FOR THE MEREDITH PLANNING BOARD BY CHRISTOPHER P. WILLIAMS, ARCHITECTS

North River Mills Bridge Hampshire County State Project # S314-45/ Federal Project # ARRA-4520(003)D FR#: HM-1

New Street Proposed Redevelopment Architecture & Urban Design Brief

TRANSITION OF TIME HISTORICAL INFLUENCE

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

429 Lansdowne Road Building or Property Name. Original owner

Sainte-Catherine Street West

Parcel 5. Level 1 Application March 12, Design Submittal POST ROAD RESIDENTIAL

CITY OF MERCER ISLAND DESIGN COMMISSION STAFF REPORT

Architectural Inventory Form

Town Center Design Guidelines

Urban Design Brief 1576 Richmond Street City of London

CHAPTER 6 DESIGN GUIDELINES FOR INDIVIDUAL BUILDING ELEMENTS. Commercial Facades

Regency Developments. Urban Design Brief. Holyrood DC2 Rezoning

Architectural Inventory Form (page 1 of 5)

Streetscape Patterns. Design Guidelines, Ridgewood Village Center Historic District, Ridgewood, N.J. page 20

Historic District Commission

Butler Junior High School

Architectural Inventory Form

242 neighborhoods NEIGHBORHOOD 4: JORDAN AVENUE CORRIDOR

Historic District Commission Staff Report February 1 st, 2017

Glenbrooke North. New Westminster s Neighbourhoods Identifying Historical Contexts. Historical Neighbourhood Context Statements 2008

Chapter. University of Massachusetts Dartmouth Campus and Facilities Master Plan

Strategic Growth Area #1 Northampton Boulevard Corridor Area

Kendall Square Urban Renewal Area

Courtice Main Street Study Community Vision Workshop PLANNING SERVICES DEPARTMENT

DESIGN REVIEW COMMITTEE AGENDA ITEM

Future Five. Design/ Development Guidelines. January 2008 Amended June 08 per City Council motion

Historic District Commission

College Park (66-021)

HERITAGE COUNTS 2017 East of England

Bel-Air Lexus Automobile Service Station

historic name: STARR MILL ROAD BRIDGE other name/site number: Beverly Heights Bridge. Bridge No. 4541

ADDENDUMS CRAFTSMAN The Craftsman style of Architecture was influenced by the English Arts and Crafts movement and East Asia, particularly Japan. In t

CENTER FOR GREAT LAKES ECOLOGY 3

Carlsbad Village Redevelopment Concept Summary of Features

Architectural Inventory Form (page 1 of 5)

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08) 1 IDENTIFICATION

INTRODUCTION Client: Frank C Robie- A bicycle /motor manufacturer Architect :Frank Lloyd Wright Contractor: H.B Barnad company-chicago Location: 5757

FORM B BUILDING MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS

EXISTING COMPREHENSIVE PLAN

HISTORIC SITE FORM - HISTORIC SITES INVENTORY PARK CITY MUNICIPAL CORPORATION (10-08)

MALL REVITALIZATION CASE STUDIES

Historic Property Report

Transcription:

HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES Please send completed form to: National Register and State Register Coordinator, Connecticut Commission State Historic on Culture Preservation & Tourism, Office, One Department Constitution of Economic Plaza, and 2nd Community Floor, Hartford, Development, CT 06103 One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103 * Note: Please attach any additional * Note: Please or expanded attach any information additional on expanded a separate information sheet. on a separate sheet. GENERAL INFORMATION Building Name (Common) Temple Street Garage Building Name (Historic) Temple Street Garage Street Address or Location 21 Temple Street Town/City New Haven Village County New Haven Owner(s) City of New Haven Parking Authority Public Private PROPERTY INFORMATION Present Use: COMMERCE/TRADE: Parking garage Historic Use: COMMERCE/TRADE: Parking garage Accessibility to public: Exterior visible from public road? Yes No Interior accessible? Yes No If yes, explain Style of building MODERN MOVEMENT: Brutalism, Expressionism Date of Construction 1961 Material(s) (Indicate use or location when appropriate): Clapboard Asbestos Siding Brick Wood Shingle Asphalt Siding Fieldstone Board & Batten Stucco Cobblestone Aluminum Siding Concrete (Type ) cast-in-place Cut Stone ( Type ) Other Structural System Wood Frame Post & Beam Balloon Load bearing masonry Structural iron or steel Other Cast-in-place reinforced concrete Roof (Type) Gable Flat Mansard Monitor Sawtooth Gambrel Shed Hip Round Other (Material) Wood Shingle Roll Asphalt Tin Slate Asphalt Shingle Built up Tile Other Concrete floor slab Number of Stories: 6 Approximate Dimensions 118' x 734' Structural Condition: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated Exterior Condition: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated Location Integrity: On original site Moved When? Alterations? Yes No If yes, explain: Renovations to commercial space; concrete restoration in 2002. FOR OFFICE USE: Town # Site # UTM District: S NR If NR, Specify: Actual Potential -1-

21 Temple Street, New Haven, CT PROPERTY INFORMATION (CONT D) Historic Resources Inventory Related outbuildings or landscape features: Barn Shed Garage Carriage House Shop Garden Other landscape features or buildings: Surrounding Environment: Open land Woodland Residential Commercial Industrial Rural High building density Scattered buildings visible from site Interrelationship of building and surroundings: The garage forms part of the Chapel Square Renewal Project of the 1950-60s, extending over a three-block area from Chapel Street facing the New Haven Green, south to Frontage Road, between Temple and Church Streets. The garage is two blocks long and a half-block wide, extending from Crown Street to Frontage Road along Temple Street. It spans across George Street, has entrances at the cross streets, and provides commercial space on the ground floor of the northern block. Other notable features of building or site (Interior and/or Exterior) This is a reinforced concrete parking garage which extends over 700 feet in length including a double-height span over George Street. Its width is 130 feet, providing two modules of double-loaded parking spaces extending north-south the length of the structure. The parking decks are supported by paired reinforced concrete piers. Integral half-height walls at the perimeter act as guardrails. The north block at ground level has infill walls of metal framing, metal panels and glazed partitions, for commerical space. Originally the garage abutted two department stores on the east, and had direct entrances at several levels. These were replaced by a community college, which is held away from the garage with a narrow landscaped space between. The surface of the concrete with the wood texture of formwork is the exterior finish. Many surfaces are curved, providing a plastic impression that belies the solidity of concrete. Three elevator/stair towers rise through the structure, with ground floor lobbies; each is clad in ceramic tile of a different bright color. The roof-top termination of the elevators form sculptural profiles at the uppermost level. Architect Paul Rudolph, Builder Fusco-Amatruda Company Structural engineer: Henry A. Pfisterer Historical or Architectural importance: See continuation sheet. Sources: Brown, Elizabeth Mills; New Haven: A Guide to Architecture and Urban Design, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1976. Carley, Rachel D., Tomorrow is Here: New Haven and the Modern Movement (Privately printed by the New Haven Preservation Trust, New Haven CT) June, 2008. Maynard, Preston. 1981. HRI 906. New Haven Architectural Survey. Map/block/lot: 241/0205/00100. See continuation sheet. Photographer Charlotte Hitchcock Date 8/07/2016 View Multiple Views Negative on File NHPT Name Charlotte Hitchcock Date 11/30/2016 Organization New Haven Preservation Trust Address 922 State Street, P.O. Box 8968, New Haven, CT 06532 Subsequent field evaluations: Latitude, Longitude: 41.304253, -72.928416 Threats to the building or site: None known Highways Vandalism Developers Renewal Private Deterioration Zoning Other Explanation -2-

Historical or Architectural importance (continued): The Temple Street Garage was designed from 1958-59 and built in 1960-61 to provide automobile parking for the clientele of new retail businesses in the downtown area along Church and Temple Streets. Most notably, there were two major department stores, the New York-based Macys and the locally-owned Malleys, and a new indoor shopping mall, Chapel Square. This urban renewal project, along with plans for a new City Hall, the new Knights of Columbus headquarters, and New Haven Coliseum, were intended to make downtown New Haven attractive to suburban shoppers and visitors from throughout the region, who would arrive by car via new highways, Interstate 91, the Connecticut Turnpike (I-95), and the Route 34 connector. The garage was planned to be a gateway, a symbol of civic and commercial rejuvenation (Architectural Record). Architect Paul Rudolph was at that time the Chair of the Department of Architecture at Yale University and was a popular, designer of cutting-edge Modernist work. His concept evolved from an early design (Figure19) which located the garage between department stores placed at the north and south ends. By the time of construction, the design had evolved to its final length and position, five levels above the street, and an underground service level with access to the Park Plaza Hotel and shopping mall. Structural engineer Henry Pfisterer taught with Rudolph at Yale, and as he did for Louis Kahn and other prominent architects working in New Haven and at Yale, Pfisterer made it possible to realize the architect s complex spatial vision (and this at a time before computer-aided design). The final constructed plan expressed the excitement of the automobile age by extending as a mega-structure the full 700-foot length of two city blocks and leaping over a street to form a gateway structure. The modeling of concrete into free-form curved sculptural forms gave expression to the sense of motion implicit in the freedom of the automobile. The sensation of moving directly from the modern highway, up the flowing ramps into the cave-like recesses of the parking levels gave visitors a timeless spatial experience akin to entering Roman ruins or natural caves (which could be exhilarating or eerie). As described by Herbert Muschamp in Rudolph s obituary, like Eero Saarinen s terminal for TWA at Kennedy Airport in New York, the garage created a monumental form for modern transportation (Muschamp 1997). The garage has become one of Rudoph s most iconic achievements and representative of his expressive genius even as some other Rudolph-designed buildings have been demolished. Its use of cast concrete to overcome the limitations of right angles embodied the expressionist impulse that Rudolph shared with fellow Modernists Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Eero Saarinen. The garage has survived a second wave of renewal, with the department stores replaced by a new community college campus. The Temple Street Garage was restored and rehabilitated in 2002. Perhaps its longevity is due to the inherent strictness of the design constraints imposed by the building type, which required flat floor levels with ramped access for cars. Other Rudolph building designs have incorporated many complex level changes of both floors and roofs, leading to maintenance problems and difficulty adapting to changing accessibility and energy requirements. The garage has been spared these issues, and so only faced the challenges of maintaining the integrity of its reinforced concrete structure. Architect: Paul Rudolph (1918-1997) was a prominent mid-twentieth-century architect and educator. His career spanned the period between the dominance of the International Style and Postmodernism. His design work - 3 -

exhibits characteristics resonating with the beton brut (raw concrete) of Le Corbusier and the poetic expressionism of Frank Lloyd Wright and Eero Saarinen, but presents a unique personal style. Paul Rudolph was born in 1918 in Kentucky but grew up in Alabama. He graduated from Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University) and spent a year working in an office in Birmingham. He then attended the Harvard Graduate School of Design before serving in World War II at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. As an officer in the U.S. Naval Reserve, he worked on the design and building of merchant ships in support of the war. During that time he may have been exposed to asbestos which eventually caused his death. Rudolph returned to Harvard after the war and studied under Walter Gropius, graduating in 1947. His classmates included I.M. Pei and Philip Johnson. After graduation, he settled in Florida and began a partnership with Ralph Twitchell in Sarasota, but also obtained a Wheelwright Traveling Fellowship (1948-1949) which he used to tour Europe. In Florida, Rudolph became known for designing Modernist vacation homes. In the early 1950s, he served as guest critic and lecturer at architectural schools including Yale University. He also earned commissions outside of the South, including the design of two important exhibits for the Museum of Modern Art, the design of the Jewett Art Center at Wellesley College (1955), and the Blue Cross Building in Boston (1956). In June 1957, he was named chair of the Department of Architecture at Yale University. During his years at Yale he began receiving commissions for monumental structures including the Art and Architecture Building at Yale, the Government Services Center in Boston, and the UMass Dartmouth campus. By this time a distinctive style had evolved, predominantly built in concrete. In New Haven, Rudolph designed the Greeley Lab (1959) and Mansfield Street apartments (1960) for Yale University, and worked with the New Haven Redevelopment Authority on a number of master plans and unbuilt schemes. Completed commissions include Crawford Manor senior housing (1965), Oriental Gardens low-income housing (1970, demolished) and the Temple Street Garage (1959-61). After leaving Yale in 1965, Rudolph s career began a decline through the 1970s. He later began to develop relationships with developers in Southeast Asia, and received commissions for large-scale projects in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Indonesia. Paul Rudolph died in 1997 in New York City where his residence at Beekman Place in Manhattan became one of his iconic creations, as had his High Street apartment in New Haven years earlier. Sources (continued): AIA Historical Directory of American Architects, http://public.aia.org/sites/hdoaa/wiki/wiki%20pages/what's%20here.aspx Architectural Record. 2/1963, p. 146. Barnes, Bruce. Paul Rudolph & his Architecture. Website at UMass Dartmouth. Accessed 12/06/2016 at http://prudolph.lib.umassd.edu/about. Biography at: http://prudolph.lib.umassd.edu/introduction. Maps and aerial views: Bing Maps accessed at: https://www.bing.com/mapspreview Google Maps accessed at: https://www.google.com/maps/ Fitch, James Marston. 1973. American Building: the Historical Forces That Shaped It, Second Edition. New York: Shocken Books. - 4 -

Metz, Don and Yuji Noga. 1966. New Architecture in New Haven. Cambridge: MIT Press. New Haven Modern web site. New Haven Preservation Trust. Accessed at: http://newhavenmodern.org/ Sensually Structured Parking Garage by Rudolph. 9/1960. Progressive Architecture. Rohan, Timothy. June, 2014. Scenographic Urbanism: Paul Rudolph and the Public Realm. Places Journal. Accessed 12/07/2016 at https://placesjournal.org/article/scenographic-urbanism-paul-rudolphand-the-public-realm/. Rudolph, Paul, Architect, Archive. Images accessed 12/07/2016 at the Library of Congress. Parking garage, New Haven, Connecticut. Temple Street elevation. Rendering. 1959. Image. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2008679990/. Church Street Redevelopment, New Haven, Connecticut. Drawing set. 1959, 1958. Image. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2007681993/. Figure 1. Location map of 21 Temple Street, New Haven. Image from Google Maps accessed 12/07/2016, annotated to indicate the extent of the building. - 5 -

Figure 2. West aerial view of Temple Street Garage, 21 Temple Street. 3D Image from Google Maps accessed 12/07/2016. Photo 3. Southwest context view of Temple Street Garage, camera facing east. At rear are Gateway Community College and the 1967 Knights of Columbus building. - 6 -

Photo 4. Southwest view of Temple Street Garage, camera facing northeast. Photo 5. West sidewalk view, camera facing north along Temple Street from Frontage Road. Overhead is the ramp seen in Photo 4 and Figure 22. - 7 -

Photo 6. West view of Temple Street Garage, camera facing north along Temple Street. Photo 7. Sidewalk view along the west, Temple Street side of the garage, camera facing north. In the foreground is the intersection with George Street, and beyond the commercial space. - 8 -

Photo 8. West view of garage at George Street, camera facing east, showing the garage spanning the street. Photo 9. East view of Temple Street Garage, camera facing north from Frontage Road, between the garage and adjacent community college campus. - 9 -

Photo 10. East view of the Temple Street Garage from George Street, camera facing south. At left is the new Gateway Community College building. This exposure was concealed from view during the years when the two department stores abutted the garage. Photo 11. Interior view of the George Street lobby, camera facing south toward George Street. - 10 -

Photo 12. Exterior view of the George Street lobby (orange elevator bank), camera facing west. Photo 13. Interior view of upper level showing orange elevator bank, camera facing east. Note typical transverse structural beams overhead, and typical parking bays nosed in below structural bays at right. - 11 -

Photo 14. Interior view of upper level showing (south) yellow elevator bank, camera facing southeast. Photo 15. Interior view of upper level showing new electric vehicle charging stations, camera facing north. - 12 -

Photo 16. Interior upper level view (south of George Street) of typical structural bays including the central north-south line of piers with integral guard walls and the staggered floor levels with paired transverse beams. Camera facing east. Photo 17. Interior view of ramp at south exit toward Frontage Road, camera facing south. - 13 -

Photo 18. Roof level view at a location above George Street, camera facing northwest. Note the sculptural forms of lighting standards and elevator towers, and skyline views of downtown buildings. Figure 19. Early planning scheme drawn by Paul Rudolph in 1958, showing garage sited to the north of its final location, with a single central spiral ramp; department stores at the north and south ends of the site; and offices with garden terraces above shops along the Church Street side. Drawing: graphite and adhesive shading film on paper; 74 x 140 cm. (approximately 30 x 54 inches) Library of Congress Online Catalog. - 14 -

Figure 20. Temple Street elevation rendering 1959, Paul Rudolph. Drawing : ink, graphite, & adhesive shading film on paper; 66 x 533 cm. (approximately 26 x 210 in.). Library of Congress Online Catalog. Figure 21. Section drawing illustrating the department store (at left), interlocking parking levels, ground level commercial use, and below-grade garage space for hotel use (Metz 1966, p. 64). - 15 -

Figure 21. Southwest view of Temple Street Garage in the late 1960s; camera facing northeast, with the adjacent Edward Malley Co. department store. Photograph: New Haven Redevelopment collection, New Haven Museum. Figure 22. Southwest view of construction; camera facing east at the southwest entry ramp. Photograph: New Haven Redevelopment collection, New Haven Museum. - 16 -