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Vesper Building
The Vesper Building is located in the Historic Automobile Alley District.
The district was the original automobile showroom and services area from
1914-1960, including Hudson, Essex, Packard, Cadillac, Pierce Arrow,
Steinmetz and Chevrolet, totaling 54 dealerships. Located one block from
the Alfred P. Murrah Building that was destroyed in the 1995 bombing,
the area is now emerging as an office and high tech area. Originally
listed as a non-contributing building to the District, the owner seriously contemplated
demolition for a surface parking lot. The architect suggested saving
the structure and was commissioned to prepare phased options for
restoration and reuse. Phase I (this phase) restored the exterior and
converted the interior for temporary use as executive parking. Phase
II includes the adaptive reuse of the ground level for a restaurant and
the second level for offices.
The building demonstrates
through leadership that "ugly" buildings
can be saved and transformed into functional and contributing properties
with creative thought. The historic precedent of automobile showrooms
was compatible with the current use as automobile storage (i.e. parking)
and thus was a continuation of history. The architectural "markings" of
the original interior stairs, walls, ceilings and paint were left as
evidence of the previous uses. The historic volume is filled with blue
light relating to the glamour of the automobile during history. The concept
demonstrates that historic structures can incorporate modern technology
resulting in new use and new excitement. Our goal was to create a mysterious
and memorable presence in an emerging Historic District that will attract
new businesses and create excitement on the street.
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