S. H. Kress & Company Building: Difference between revisions

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:''This article is about the 1937 building at 3rd Avenue North and 19th Street. For other buildings used by S. H. Kress & Company, see [[Kress Building]].''
:''This article is about the 1937 building at 3rd Avenue North and 19th Street. For other buildings used by S. H. Kress & Company, see [[Kress Building]].''
[[File:1937 Kress building.jpg|right|thumb|375px|S. H. Kress & Company Building in 1937]]
[[File:1937 Kress building.jpg|right|thumb|450px|S. H. Kress & Company Building in 1937]]
The '''S. H. Kress & Company Building''' is a 75,000 square foot, five-story Art Deco commercial building on the northeast corner of [[3rd Avenue North]] and [[19th Street North|19th Street]]. It was built in [[1937]]<!--or 1939--> for S. H. Kress & Company's 5-and-10 cent store.
The '''S. H. Kress & Company Building''' is a 75,000 square foot, five-story modern-style commercial building on the southwest corner of [[Block 73]], northeast of the intersection of [[3rd Avenue North]] and [[19th Street North|19th Street]]. It was built in [[1937]] for S. H. Kress & Company's 5-and-10 cent store. It replaced the smaller [[Old Kress Building|1915 Kress Building]] at 1910-1914 [[2nd Avenue North]].


The modern design was a an early example of stylistic change for the company's architect, Edward F. Sibbert, who had recently designed a modern flagship store for New York's Fifth Avenue. The steel-frame building features streamlined white marble cladding and horizontal groupings of windows trimmed with bronze. Cantilevered canopies shade the sidewalk at the entrances and a monumental vertical sign graces the principal corner. [[Day & Sachs]] of Birmingham was the contractor.
The steel-frame building was designed by company architect Edward F. Sibbert in a Bauhaus-inspired modern style that contrasted with his recently-completed Nashville store with its Greek revival motifs. The Birmingham store's horizontal scheme contrasted with the art deco-styled flagship store in New York. He specified a mottled cream-color terra-cotta facade trimmed with bronze. The display windows were wrapped with contrasting darker-colored marble panels and shaded with awnings housed in copper boxes. The wider display windows on 3rd Avenue were covered by projecting balconies with pipe railings. The upper walls, with groups of two-over-two windows, were nearly stripped of ornament, except for horizontal string courses, and large golden letters at the cornice and on the rounded corner, where the horizontal scheme is interrupted by a three-story vertical sign with a large flagpole on top. The overall effect evoked the design of ocean liners. The building was constructed for $750,000 by [[Day & Sachs]] of Birmingham.


The Kress store thrived in the center of Birmingham's downtown theater and retail district during it's mid-century heyday. In the 1960s the exterior was covered with new metal panels. The store closed in [[1978]] leaving the ground floor vacant and offices on the upper floors. The building was added to the [[National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham|National Register of Historic Places]] on [[January 4]], [[1982]].
The Kress store thrived in the center of Birmingham's downtown theater and retail district during it's mid-century heyday. In the 1960s the exterior was covered with new metal panels. The store closed in [[1978]] leaving the ground floor vacant and offices on the upper floors. The building was added to the [[National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham|National Register of Historic Places]] on [[January 4]], [[1982]].
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In [[2003]] the firm of [[Wiggins, Childs, Quinn & Pantazis]] acquired the building and remodeled it to relocate their offices from the [[Wells Fargo Building|SouthTrust Tower]]. The renovations were performed by [[Southpace Properties]] and designed by [[Cohen & Company]] with help from historic preservation consultant [[Linda Nelson]]. The project, which was completed in [[2004]], qualified for a [[Historic Preservation Tax Credit]]. The lower level was also remodeled into a cabaret theatre for the [[Red Mountain Theatre Company]].
In [[2003]] the firm of [[Wiggins, Childs, Quinn & Pantazis]] acquired the building and remodeled it to relocate their offices from the [[Wells Fargo Building|SouthTrust Tower]]. The renovations were performed by [[Southpace Properties]] and designed by [[Cohen & Company]] with help from historic preservation consultant [[Linda Nelson]]. The project, which was completed in [[2004]], qualified for a [[Historic Preservation Tax Credit]]. The lower level was also remodeled into a cabaret theatre for the [[Red Mountain Theatre Company]].
"Kress Building LLC", headed by [[Rocco Calamusa Jr]], acquired the building in [[2021]]. After Red Mountain Theater moved to a new arts campus in [[Parkside district|Parkside]], the company developed a conference and events center, called '''KRESS BHM''', in the building.
==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:Kress entrance doors.jpg|Showcase windows and entrance doors on 3rd Avenue North
File:Kress sales floor interior.jpg|View of the main sales floor
</gallery>


==References==
==References==
* {{White-1977}}
* {{White-1977}}
* Frieden, Kitty (March 24, 1983) "[http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/digital/collection/p16044coll6/id/1118 Blach's believes 19th Street new frontier]" {{BN}} - via {{BPLDC}}
* Frieden, Kitty (March 24, 1983) "[http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/digital/collection/p16044coll6/id/1118 Blach's believes 19th Street new frontier]" {{BN}} - via {{BPLDC}}
* Chastine, Robert Kevin (2002) "[https://getd.libs.uga.edu/pdfs/chastine_robert_k_200212_mhp.pdf Dime Store Deco: The Architecture And Adaptive Reuse of Depression Era S. H. Kress 5 & 10 Cent Stores]" Master's Thesis. University of Georgia.
* "Old Kress Building gets new look" (March 6, 2005) {{BBJ}}
* "Old Kress Building gets new look" (March 6, 2005) {{BBJ}}
* Rebman, Stephanie (February 1, 2023) "KRESS BHM event venue opens in downtown Birmingham." {{BBJ}}


==External links==
==External links==
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Kress Building}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kress Building}}
[[Category:Kress Building|*]]
[[Category:1937 buildings]]
[[Category:1937 buildings]]
[[Category:19th Street North]]
[[Category:3rd Avenue North]]
[[Category:Block 73]]
[[Category:Office buildings]]
[[Category:Office buildings]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham]]

Latest revision as of 17:10, 1 February 2023

This article is about the 1937 building at 3rd Avenue North and 19th Street. For other buildings used by S. H. Kress & Company, see Kress Building.
S. H. Kress & Company Building in 1937

The S. H. Kress & Company Building is a 75,000 square foot, five-story modern-style commercial building on the southwest corner of Block 73, northeast of the intersection of 3rd Avenue North and 19th Street. It was built in 1937 for S. H. Kress & Company's 5-and-10 cent store. It replaced the smaller 1915 Kress Building at 1910-1914 2nd Avenue North.

The steel-frame building was designed by company architect Edward F. Sibbert in a Bauhaus-inspired modern style that contrasted with his recently-completed Nashville store with its Greek revival motifs. The Birmingham store's horizontal scheme contrasted with the art deco-styled flagship store in New York. He specified a mottled cream-color terra-cotta facade trimmed with bronze. The display windows were wrapped with contrasting darker-colored marble panels and shaded with awnings housed in copper boxes. The wider display windows on 3rd Avenue were covered by projecting balconies with pipe railings. The upper walls, with groups of two-over-two windows, were nearly stripped of ornament, except for horizontal string courses, and large golden letters at the cornice and on the rounded corner, where the horizontal scheme is interrupted by a three-story vertical sign with a large flagpole on top. The overall effect evoked the design of ocean liners. The building was constructed for $750,000 by Day & Sachs of Birmingham.

The Kress store thrived in the center of Birmingham's downtown theater and retail district during it's mid-century heyday. In the 1960s the exterior was covered with new metal panels. The store closed in 1978 leaving the ground floor vacant and offices on the upper floors. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 4, 1982.

In 1983 Costa and Head planned to redevelop the building as part of their project for "The Atrium", which would also include several other structures on 2nd Avenue, and would return Blach's department store to its former corner in the Kress building. The project was reduced in scope and proceeded without Blach's involvement.

In 2003 the firm of Wiggins, Childs, Quinn & Pantazis acquired the building and remodeled it to relocate their offices from the SouthTrust Tower. The renovations were performed by Southpace Properties and designed by Cohen & Company with help from historic preservation consultant Linda Nelson. The project, which was completed in 2004, qualified for a Historic Preservation Tax Credit. The lower level was also remodeled into a cabaret theatre for the Red Mountain Theatre Company.

"Kress Building LLC", headed by Rocco Calamusa Jr, acquired the building in 2021. After Red Mountain Theater moved to a new arts campus in Parkside, the company developed a conference and events center, called KRESS BHM, in the building.

Gallery

References

External links