Here's a great postcard announcing the new Apple Growers Association cold storage warehouse on Wasco Street. We now know this building as the Waucoma Center. It was purchased by the Port of Hood River in the 1980s, and underwent a major renovation into office space in 1985. It is currently owned by CenturyLink, and also houses offices for Insitu and the US Forest Service.
Here's a more recent view.
Category: [Downtown Hood River]
Interesting, this illustration shows 6 floors above the basement level, but today's view shows only 4.
rwf on 18th August 2011 @ 10:33am
So, in the 1930's they must have started constructing large buildings without character.
Largest in the world and air-conditioned is impressive though. Next time I am in town I will have to count the floors.
l.e. on 19th August 2011 @ 8:33pm
The 1985 renovation totally gutted the building. Hopefully someone involved in it can explain how the number of floors changed. If it was constructed like the Union Building, the exterior shell and the interior floors were not attached, allowing a layer of cork insulation to fill the gap and fully envelope the interior space.
Arthur on 21st August 2011 @ 11:33pm
The building is viewed from the side of the train- the downhill, or North side. If you see it from the freeway you see 6 floors and from Wasco you see 4?
Elizabeth on 12th September 2011 @ 11:49pm
Nope, sorry, I work in this building, only 4 floors existing, plus the basement. From Wasco you see only two floors.
rwf on 21st October 2011 @ 8:51am
l.e, I don't think this is building is totally without character. It's actually of minimalist art deco design which fits with its building date,1937 and other designs by the architect, Henschien, during this period. It's a little hard to distinguish from this rendering but the uninterrupted piers rising to the top of the building, the (what appears to be) recessed spandrels (the horizontal elements) under the windows, and the possibility of some kind of art deco design at the top of the corner towers would fit with that design. Even today, with all the changes to the facade, it strikes me as art deco. Some of Henschien's other buildings are much more embellished with art deco features...but that takes money and the AGA probably already paid up to get him, as he was the authority on designing packing plants in those days. He designed 300+ and you can be certain that the HR building is an adaptation of one of his others.
Ellen on 5th April 2015 @ 4:54pm