J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building

Coordinates: 44°04′22″N 116°56′15″W / 44.072844°N 116.937608°W / 44.072844; -116.937608
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J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building
Photograph of the J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building, a large, brick, blocky, mostly windowless building
The Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building in 2015
J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building is located in Idaho
J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building
J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building is located in the United States
J. C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building
Location2nd Ave. S. and 6th St.
Payette, Idaho
Coordinates44°04′22″N 116°56′15″W / 44.072844°N 116.937608°W / 44.072844; -116.937608
Arealess than one acre
Built1928
ArchitectTourtellotte & Hummel
MPSTourtellotte and Hummel Architecture TR
NRHP reference No.82000360[1]
Added to NRHPNovember 17, 1982

The J.C. Palumbo Fruit Company Packing and Warehouse Building is a historic packing house in Payette, Idaho that was built in 1928. It was designed by architects Tourtellotte & Hummel.

The building was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[1]

It is supposedly a 12 feet (3.7 m) by 74 feet (23 m) structure.[2]

It was deemed significant as one of few non-retail and non-office commercial structures designed by Tourtelotte & Hummel and covered in a 1982 group nomination of properties to the National Register. It was asserted that "its monolithic brick surface may be seen in heralding the end, in the work of this firm, of a habit of dressing up such buildings in the materials one would expect to find in an office block." The building "expresses an interest in beautification by use of a brick veneer which is not, strictly speaking, necessary. At the same time, physical function is clearly expressed, through fenestration or its lack, by loading docks and by the trackside location. While its sleekness may be seen as precursor of a functionalist aesthetic, it seems also to mark the beginning of the end of this sort of expression in this sort of building. Plain cast concrete became the material of choice, and none of the warehouse and shop buildings designed in later years" by the firm has been deemed noteworthy enough for inclusion in the 1982 group nomination.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ a b "Idaho State Historic Society Inventory Sheet for Group Nomination of Tourtellotte and Hummel Architecture: J.C. Palumbo Fruit Packing Company Warehouse Building". National Park Service. 1982. Retrieved January 22, 2017. with two photos from 1980