Building Oregon

Doernbecker Childrens Hospital, Oregon Health Sciences University (Portland, Oregon)

Title
Doernbecker Childrens Hospital, Oregon Health Sciences University (Portland, Oregon)
LC Subject
Architecture, American Architecture--United States
Creator
Lawrence and Holford Lawrence, Ellis Fuller Holford, William Muir, Thomas Shea, J. F. Portland Wire & Iron WorksWorks
Creator Display
Lawrence & Holford (architecture firm, 1913-1928) Ellis Fuller Lawrence (architect, 1879-1946) William Gordon Holford (architect, 1878-1970) Thomas Muir (builder/contractor) Portland Wire & Iron Works (builder/contractor) J. F. Shea (builder/contractor)
Description
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. State of Oregon Inventory of Historic Property Ellis Lawrence Building Survey
Provenance
University of Oregon Libraries
Temporal
1920-1929
Work Type
architecture (object genre) built works hospitals (buildings for health facility) documentation (activity)
Latitude
45.500563
Longitude
-122.688027
Location
Portland >> Multnomah County >> Oregon >> United States Multnomah County >> Oregon >> United States Oregon >> United States United States
Street Address
3181 Southwest Sam Jackson Park Road
Date
1926
Identifier
lawrence_portland_1-1-10.pdf
Rights
In Copyright
Rights Holder
University of Oregon
Type
Image
Format
application/pdf
Set
Building Oregon
Primary Set
Building Oregon
Is Part Of
Oregon Health Sciences University (Portland, Oregon)
Institution
University of Oregon
Note
Significance Statement: This building was the result of various private donations beginning with the Doernbecker family . Later the Portland Junior League, American Legion, Portland Rotary Club, Elk's Club, State Federation of Women's Clubs all donated funds and as a result the capacity of the hospital was doubled . The building is significant as an example of a statewide social-humanitarian effort . It is architecturally significant as part of the Medical School campus ensemble . The building project was almost stopped by the then Governor when he vetoed a n appropriation. There seems to have been enough public outcry that the work finally proceeded only to have the Portland Building Dept refuse to issue a permit . This was due to the site being zoned residential even though two other medical buildings were already next to this site . The permit process was held up for a month while zone changes were applied for and received. It is the State's only children's hospital.