Palace Hotel (Eugene, Oregon)
- Title
-
Palace Hotel (Eugene, Oregon)
- LC Subject
-
Architecture, American
Architecture--United States
- Alternative
-
Lane Building (Eugene, Oregon
Lane Hotel (Eugene, Oregon)
Griggs Hotel (Eugene, Oregon)
Hotel Gross (Eugene, Oregon)
- Creator
-
McFarland, Van Dorn
- Creator Display
-
Van Dorn McFarland (builder/contractor)
- Description
-
National Register of Historic Places (Listed, 1977)
Document: National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form
- Provenance
-
Design Library, University of Oregon Libraries
- Temporal
-
1900-1909
- Work Type
-
architecture (object genre)
built works
views (visual works)
exterior views
hotels (public accommodations)
facilities, commercial
mercantiles (buildings)
stores
- Latitude
-
44.054766
- Longitude
-
-123.092842
- Location
-
Eugene >> Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
Oregon >> United States
United States
- Street Address
-
488 Willamette Street
- Date
-
1903
- Identifier
-
OR_Lane_Eugene_Palace
- Item Locator
-
edit
- Rights
-
In Copyright
- Rights Holder
-
University of Oregon
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
application/pdf
- Set
-
Building Oregon
- Primary Set
-
Building Oregon
- Institution
-
University of Oregon
- Citation
-
National Register of Historic Places, http://www.nps.gov/nr/
- Note
-
The Palace Hotel as it appears today would be immediately recognizable to anyone who knew the Hotel Gross in 1903. No major structural alterations have taken place, and the interior has undergone only cosmetic, and rectifiable changes. The street orientation of the Palace, and its relationship to public transportation and commercial centers, are as they were in 1903. The hotel continues to function in a residential capacity. *****Exterior. The three-story frame Hotel Gross was constructed in 1903 in a style similar to hotels built in the 1880s elsewhere in the Pacific Northwest. It is especially remin-, iscent of the Mt. Hood Hotel, a resort establishment built at Hood Rfver in the 1880s, in its detailing and proximity to the railroad depot. Rectangular in plan, and with bracketed overhanging eaves, the Hotel Gross might best be described as a western commercial adaptation of the Italianate. The name