Maegly, A. H., House (Portland, Oregon)
- Title
-
Maegly, A. H., House (Portland, Oregon)
- LC Subject
-
Architecture, American
Architecture
- Alternative
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A. H. Maegly House (Portland, Oregon)
Aaron H. Maegly House (Portland, Oregon)
- Creator
-
Bennes, John V.
- Photographer
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Arden, Bruce
- Creator Display
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John Virginius Bennes (architect, 1867-1943)
- Description
-
The fashionable house completed for wealthy Portland broker A. H. Maegly in Arlington Heights overlooking downtown Portland in 1915 is the foremost example of Oregon architecture clearly influenced by the Prairie School — Frank Lloyd Wright and his followers. It was designed by John V. Bennes, who received his early training in Illinois and whose admiration for the Prairie School architects was well known. With its tile roofs and ornament taken from the Italian Renaissance, Bennes 1 design is Mediterranean in spirit, but its slab-like roof overhangs, the Wrightian decorative brackets, the cantilevered second story bays, and the strong horizontal emphasis created by ribbon windows and tile string course and frieze are stylistic characteristics of Prairie School architecture. Source: National Register Nomination.
National Register of Historic Places (Listed, 1981)
- View
-
exterior view of window with decorative panel featuring Italianate or Renaissance details
- Temporal
-
1910-1919
- Work Type
-
architecture (object genre)
built works
houses
bay windows
windows
- Latitude
-
45.522211
- Longitude
-
-122.7084767
- Location
-
Portland >> Multnomah County >> Oregon >> United States
Oregon >> United States
Multnomah County >> Oregon >> United States
- Street Address
-
226 Southwest Kingston Avenue
- Date
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1915
- View Date
-
1980
- Identifier
-
pna_100003.tiff
- Rights
-
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
image/tiff
- Set
-
Building Oregon
- Primary Set
-
Building Oregon
- Institution
-
University of Oregon
- Note
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This image is included in Building Oregon: Architecture of Oregon and the Pacific Northwest, a digital collection which provides documentation about the architectural heritage of the Pacific Northwest.