Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 33
- Item
- 3/22/1925
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
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Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 33
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 32
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 31
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 3
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 21
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 2
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 11
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Third Unit, Sheet 1
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Second Unit, Sheet 5
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Second Unit, Sheet 4
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Second Unit, Sheet 2
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, Second Unit, Sheet 1
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 7
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 6
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 5
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 4
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 3
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 2
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Point Defiance Pavilion, First Unit, Sheet 1
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Twenty three technical drawings for the Point Defiance Pavilion, created by A.J. Russell and Earl N. Dugan, submitted in a series of "units" over 5/6/1919, 2/22/1921 and 3/22/1925. While the name Point Defiance Pavilion sometimes refers to the octagonal structure on what is now the Point Defiance Marina, these plans refer to the structure closer to the water which often took the same name. According to Edwin D. Ferris' original designs, this structure was originally a bathhouse, then became a restaurant and finally converted to an aquarium before the building was destroyed by a fire in 1972.
Earl N. Dugan was born in Perry, Iowa and graduated from the University of Illinois in 1906. After working for a short while in Chicago and San Francisco, he arrived in Tacoma working independently as a draftsman. This led to partnerships with Sutton, Whitney and Dugan as well as Mock, Morrison and Dugan. Dugan was the founding member of the Tacoma Society of Architects and would sometimes use this platform to secure contracts through free consultation, as was the case for the Point Defiance Pavilion.
Ambrose James (sometimes Janvier) Russell was born in Trivandrum, India to a Scottish missionary. Russell studied at the University of Glasgow and the Ecole des Beaux Arts before coming to America in 1884. In 1895, Russell was the Director of the Watercolor Sketch Club, which displayed work at the Ferry Museum (now the Washington State Historical Society) and curated work from future partner Everett Phipps Babcock. In 1896, Russell was appointed a Professor of Architecture at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Russell formed partnerships with Albert Walter Spaulding and Frederick Henry Heath in 1901, Everett Phipps Babcock in 1905, H.G. Ripley in 1908, Walter E. Rice and Irving Harlan Thomas in 1908 and finally Gaston Lance, A. Gordon Lumm and Irwin Muri in 1930. Russell was a member of the American Institute of Architects, Secretary of the Tacoma Society of Architects and a Mason. When Russell passed, three of his Pallbearers were architects featured in this collection: Gaston Lance, Ernest Mock and Earl N. Dugan.
Pacific Savings and Loan, Sheet 7 of Set 11
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Pacific Savings and Loan, Sheet 10 of Set 11
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Four of 33 technical drawings for the Pacific Savings and Loan Building. Four of the drawings in this collection were created by Russell and Babcock on June 15, 1908, fourteen years before the building would be constructed. Nineteen of the drawings in this collection were created by R.C. Reamer in July 23, 1930 for a renovation. The structure was demolished in 1963.
Ambrose James (sometimes Janvier) Russell was born in Trivandrum, India to a Scottish missionary. Russell studied at the University of Glasgow and the Ecole des Beaux Arts before coming to America in 1884. In 1895, Russell was the Director of the Watercolor Sketch Club, which displayed work at the Ferry Museum (now the Washington State Historical Society) and curated work from future partner Everett Phipps Babcock. In 1896, Russell was appointed a Professor of Architecture at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Russell formed partnerships with Albert Walter Spaulding and Frederick Henry Heath in 1901, Everett Phipps Babcock in 1905, H.G. Ripley in 1908, Walter E. Rice and Irving Harlan Thomas in 1908 and finally Gaston Lance, A. Gordon Lumm and Irwin Muri in 1930. Russell was a member of the American Institute of Architects, Secretary of the Tacoma Society of Architects and a Mason. When Russell passed, three of his Pallbearers were architects featured in this collection: Gaston Lance, Ernest Mock and Earl N. Dugan.
Everett Phipps Babcock was born in Tacoma and worked primarily with Ambrose James Russell as Russell & Babcock. In addition to the residences listed below, Babcock also built his own residence for his wife Clara on American Lake named "The Totem Pole." Babcock died suddenly after a routine tonsil removal operation in Pasadena, California.
Pacific Refrigerating Company, Sheet 17-S-9
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Pacific Refrigerating Company, Sheet 17-S-5
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Pacific Refrigerating Company, Sheet 17-S-10
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Series of four drawings for a supplemental building located on "lots number 1-10-10 including block number 2508 at 25th street between Hood street and Jefferson avenue." The plans were drawn by Portland based Northwestern Ice and Cold Storage Company and created on January 30, 1929 and revised on February 12, 1929. This building was originally part of the Pacific Brewing & Malting Co, then the location of the Hemmingson Co. Warehouse before this building was remodeled with these plans as the Pacific Refrigerating Company in 1934. The building was renamed the Alpine Cold Storage building in the 1980s and suffered from a fire that led to it being demolished in July of 2003.
This building was originally part of the Pacific Brewing & Malting Co, then the location of the Hemmingson Co. Warehouse before this building was remodeled with these plans as the Pacific Refrigeration Co. in 1934. The building was renamed the Alpine Cold Storage building in the 1980s and suffered from a fire that led to it being demolished in July of 2003.