Weinstein, Clara and Samuel B., House (Portland, Oregon)
- Title
-
Weinstein, Clara and Samuel B., House (Portland, Oregon)
- LC Subject
-
Architecture, American
Architecture--United States
- Alternative
-
Clara and Samuel B. Weinstein House (Portland, Oregon)
- Creator
-
Hemenway, Roscoe D.
- Creator Display
-
Roscoe De Leur Hemenway (architect, 1899-1959)
- Description
-
National Register of Historic Places (Listed, 1992)
- View
-
exterior
- Provenance
-
University of Oregon Libraries
- Temporal
-
1930-1939
- Style Period
-
Norman Revival
- Work Type
-
architecture (object genre)
built works
views (visual works)
exterior views
dwellings
houses
- Location
-
Clackamas County >> Oregon >> United States
Oregon >> United States
United States
Lake Oswego >> Clackamas County >> Oregon >> United States
- Street Address
-
16847 Southwest Greenbriar Road
- Date
-
1931
- Identifier
-
pna_90024.jpg
- Rights
-
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
- Rights Holder
-
Oregon State Historic Preservation Office
- Source
-
Oregon State Historic Preservation Office, http://www.oregon.gov/OPRD/HCD/SHPO/
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
image/jpeg
- Set
-
Building Oregon
- Primary Set
-
Building Oregon
- Institution
-
University of Oregon
- Citation
-
National Register of Historic Places, http://www.nps.gov/nr/
- Note
-
"The picturesque Norman Farmhouse constructed in 1931 for Clara and Samuel Weinstein on Southwest Greenbriar Road on the south shore of Lake Oswego in Clackamas County, Oregon was designed by Roscoe Hemenway. Hemenway was one of a number of architects who prepared distinctive house designs in the popular historic period styles for clients in the Portland area through the 1930s and early 1940s. His work is generally recognizable for the quality of workmanship and pleasing details. Like the later work of the acknowledged master of the Arts and Crafts tradition, Wade Pipes, Hemenway's houses evoked a period theme while at the same time pointing in the direction of modernism. The Weinstein House, in its public, or south elevation particularly, recalls Pipes' Portland houses for George Pipes (1923) and Elizabeth Ducey (1926), which exhibited even more striking sculptural treatment of wall dormers gripped by curving eaves. Source: National Register nomination.
This image was included in the documentation to support a nomination to the National Register of Historic Places, a program of the National Park Service. The image is provided here by the Oregon State Historic Preservation Office and the University of Oregon Libraries to facilitate scholarship, research, and teaching. For other uses, such as publication, contact the State Historic Preservation Office. Please credit the Oregon State Historic Preservation Office when using this image.