A. E. Larson Building

The A.E. Larson Building is a prominent Art Deco office building in Yakima, Washington, built in 1931. When it was built the eleven-story brick structure was by far the tallest building in Yakima, an otherwise low-lying town. It was built by entrepreneur Alfred E. Larson and designed by local architect John W. Maloney.[2]

A.E. Larson Building
Location6 S. 2nd St., Yakima, Washington
Coordinates46°36′8″N 120°30′13″W
Arealess than one acre
Built1931 (1931)
ArchitectJohn W. Maloney
Architectural styleArt Deco
NRHP reference No.84003647[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 11, 1984

Description

The A.E. Larson Building is 188 feet (57 m) tall to the top of its flagpole, and is 130 feet (40 m) by 65 feet (20 m) in plan. It is eleven stories tall, with retail shops on the ground floor, together with the main lobby. The building is clad in salmon-colored brick and terra cotta. The ground level is faced with stone with Art Deco bronze accents. The building rises straight from this base to the tenth floor, where it steps back, with deeper setbacks on the eleventh floor. The lobby is richly detailed in stone and bronze, with elaborate bronze surrounds at the three elevator entrances. The building's original windows are a unique vertically-hinged steel casement that allows cleaning from inside.[2]

History

Alfred E. Larson was born in Minnesota, arriving in Washington in 1884, where he worked in lumber camps. He came to Yakima in 1891 to buy a lumberyard. A successful businessman, he bought real estate, involved himself in politics and promoted local business. Despite the Great Depression, Larson committed $600,000 of his own funds to build the A.E. Larson Building in 1931, benefiting from reduced construction costs. He hired John W. Maloney, a Yakima architect, to design his building, and the Hans Pederson Construction Company to build it. The new tower replaced a bank building on the site. Larson died in 1934, and Maloney moved to Seattle in 1946.[2]

The A.E. Larson Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 11, 1984.[1]

References


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