Historic Name: |
Bank |
Common Name: |
U.S. Bank |
Style: |
Modern - Contemporary |
Neighborhood: |
West Seattle Junction |
Built By: |
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Year Built: |
1956 |
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Significance |
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This highly-altered 1965 building is associated with midcentury
development in the West Seattle Junction business district. It has been altered
with newer aluminum sash and tile cladding.
This wood-frame bank was built in 1956, an early example of the
auto-oriented banks constructed in most Seattle neighborhood commercial
districts. It was dramatically modernized in 1995 with a new entry, synthetic
cladding and new windows.
The Junction, West
Seattle's primary commercial district, acquired its name in 1907 when a new
street car line on California Avenue SW was extended south to Fauntleroy Park,
crossing the Admiral streetcar line at SW Alaska Street. West Seattle, incorporated
as a city in 1902, had built the Admiral line--the nation’s first municipally-owned
streetcar line. At first, the Junction was just a swamp with a few real estate
offices, but in 1907 West Seattle voted
to be annexed to Seattle. Enhanced transportation and new amenities,
accompanied by heavy promotion, encouraged a real estate boom, with new
residents rapidly buying lots and building homes. Jefferson School opened in 1912,
and had to be expanded in 1917. The 1920s brought significant growth, with major
stores such as Ernst Hardware, Bartell Drugs, a J. C. Penney department store
and two "five and dimes"--Woolworth's and Kress. Although development
slowed during the Depression, the proximity of defense industries brought many
new residents during World War II. The
Junction thrived into the 1950s with several modern retail buildings and larger
stores. By the 1980s, however, competition from shopping malls made the
Junction's stores less competitive. J.C. Penney left in 1987 and many other retailers
selling common items such as clothing closed, generally replaced by
restaurants, bars and service businesses. In 1985, a large retail/office/residential
project was built on the former site of Jefferson Elementary School. In the
early 1990s, the City of Seattle adopted a comprehensive plan that focused
growth in "urban villages," including the Junction. By 2010, numerous
single-story buildings were being replaced by six-story mixed-use structures with
underground parking, significantly changing the district’s character.
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Appearance |
This wood-frame building was dramatically modernized in 1995 with a new
entry, synthetic cladding and new windows. It sits on a sloping corner site,
with the large Post-Modern gabled entry toward the west end, with
aluminum-framed doors and large windows. Three aluminum-framed divided light
windows are toward the east end. At the west end is a long bridge structure
sheltering above the drive-through window and ATMs. Cladding is synthetic stucco.
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