Roden Block: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
==Tenants== | ==Tenants== | ||
[[File:1891 Roden Block map.png|right|thumb|350px|Detail of an 1891 Sanborn map showing the Roden Block]] | |||
* Ground floor | * Ground floor | ||
** 200: [[United Cigar Store]] (c. 1929), [[Paramount Candies]] (1930s), [[Corner Soda]] (1940s-50s), [[Paramount (2011)|Paramount]] yogurt shop (2011–2013), [[Paramount]] bar (2013–) | ** 200: [[United Cigar Store]] (c. 1929), [[Paramount Candies]] (1930s), [[Corner Soda]] (1940s-50s), [[Paramount (2011)|Paramount]] yogurt shop (2011–2013), [[Paramount]] bar (2013–) |
Revision as of 15:15, 15 May 2019
The Roden Block or Roden's Block, also called the Roden Building or, now, the Ingram Building is a commercial structure developed by Benjamin Roden before 1884 at the northwest corner of 2nd Avenue North and 20th Street North.
The richly-ornamented three-story commercial block with its heavy cornice and corner pediments was designed by architect Charles Wheelock. The building was constructed of pressed-brick with stone trim. The 2nd Avenue facade was the building's apparent "front", with blank walls facing 20th Street. Roden's grocery occupied the lower floor with a corner entrance. Offices were located on the second floor and sleeping rooms on the top.
The Young Men's Christian Association rented a suite of rooms in the building on October 16, 1885. Birmingham National Bank replaced Roden's grocery April 1887. According to an 1887 business directory, the Birmingham Board of Aldermen held their meetings in the Roden Building.
By the autumn of 1917 the elaborate corner parapets had been removed.
In 1937 the Roden Block and adjacent Caheen Building at 1924 2nd Avenue North were combined and completely renovated by Miller, Martin & Lewis Architects for Parisian stores. The cornices were removed, window openings enlarged, and a new white stone cladding was installed with simplified geometric details. Parisian's storefront was completely updated again in a 1950 renovation that also included excavation of a storage basement and a mezzanine-level men's store. The new entrance, clad in glass and Alabama marble, featured the nation's first installation of touch-action hydraulically-operated doors, as well as backlit plexi-glass and neon signage.
A 2011 renovation for owners Kent and Angie Ingram was designed by architect Jeremy Erdreich.
Tenants
- Ground floor
- 200: United Cigar Store (c. 1929), Paramount Candies (1930s), Corner Soda (1940s-50s), Paramount yogurt shop (2011–2013), Paramount bar (2013–)
- 202: shoe store/tobacco shop (c. 1929), Watts Apparel Shop (c. 1931)
- 204: J. M. Watson & Co. real estate (1899), Sophia Betsch barber (1905), Bon-Ton Hatters (1926-1929), Betty Maid Dresses, Zoe's Candies (1964), Subway Restaurant
- 206: Hanover Jewelry (c. 1929-1964)
- Birmingham National Bank (1887-)
- Benjamin Roden's grocery, Parisian (1937-1989)
- Butler's Shoes
- Wall & Giacopazzi wholesale produce (1880s)
- Upper floors
- 1: John McQueen attorney (1899), Mercantile Collecting Co. (1905), Barham Edwards Loan Co. (1926)
- 1-2: Hickman & Hamill attorneys (1905)
- 2-6: Smith's College of Beauty Culture (1926)
- 2: Thomson & Berry, real estate & insurance brokers (1884–), Avondale Stove & Foundry Co. (1887), E. N. Hammill / M. H. VanDiver attorneys (1899)
- 6: S. L. Weaver attorney / C. R. Leonard collector (1899), N. E. Russell (1905)
- 3: Ivey Lewis attorney (1899-1905), W. F. Dickinson (1905)
- 5: R. A. McAdory (1899), J. A. Mitchell attorney (1899-1905) / F. Deedmeyer (1905), W. O. Snyder (1926)
- 7: G. P. Moore / C. W. Hickman attorneys (1899), Avondale Land Co. (1905), R. Bethea & Co./Birmingham Musicians Protective Association (1926)
- 9: Central Coal Co. (1905)
- 10: Robert H. Pearson attorney (1887-1905), Southland Studio (1926)
- 11: James Going real estate & insurance (1880s-1905), Malcolm Betha (1926)
- 3rd floor: Moose Hall/John Nappi (1926)
- M. W. Steele, architect (1884-)
- offices of the Avondale Stove & Foundry Co. (1887–)
- Ingram Law Offices
- Lane, Taliaferro & Tabor attorneys (1885-1887)
- Gregg & Weakley attorneys (1887)
- Heflin & Knox attorneys (1887)
- A. O. Lane attorney (1887)
- Martin & McEachin attorneys, claim agent for A.G.S.R.R (1887)
- C. E. Rice real estate (1887)
- YMCA (1885-1926)
- West End Land & Improvement Co. (1887-1897)
References
- Pocket Business Directory and Guide to Birmingham, Ala. (1887) - accessed January 16, 2007
- City Directory of Birmingham, Alabama (1899) Atlanta, Georgia: Maloney Directory Co.
- Polk's Birmingham City Directory (1926) Birmingham: R. L. Polk & Co.
- White, Marjorie Longenecker (1977) Downtown Birmingham: Architectural and Historical Walking Tour Guide. Birmingham: Birmingham Historical Society.
- Fazio, Michael W. (2010) Landscape of Transformations: Architecture and Birmingham, Alabama. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press ISBN 9781572336872
- Tomberlin, Michael (January 15, 2011) "Sweet dream project in downtown Birmingham remembers Paramount, Parisian's heyday." The Birmingham News