Hayden Building (Boston) Explained

Hayden Building
Location:681-683 Washington St., Boston, Massachusetts
Coordinates:42.3514°N -71.063°W
Built:1875
Architect:Henry Hobson Richardson
Norcross Bros.
Architecture:Romanesque
Added:December 9, 1980
Mpsub:Boston Theatre MRA
Refnum:80000446

The Hayden Building is a historic building at 681-683 Washington Street in Boston, Massachusetts.

The building was built in 1875 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 as well as designated a Boston Landmark in 1977 Designed to act as commercial retail space, this four story brownstone building shows little of the ornamentation generally associated with Henry Hobson Richardson. It is the last surviving commercial retail building designed by Richardson in Boston. The building is in Boston's Chinatown neighborhood.

Description

The five story Richardsonian Romanesque building was built on a very narrow lot. It is constructed of Longmeadow brownstone and is sparsely detailed with granite lintels and arches.

Background

This building was not recorded as a Henry Hobson Richardson building until work done by architectural and landscape historian Cynthia Zaitzevsky made note of it in 1973.[1]

Previous summaries of Richardson's works relied on office books. This building was built by the Richardson family and was not charged an architectural or design fee. This building replaced a drugstore that exploded on this site in 1875.[2]

All other commercial buildings designed by Richardson in Boston have been demolished.

Restoration

Historic Boston Incorporated acquired the building in 1995 and completed a total exterior restoration to repair fire damage.[3] Work was done by the architectural firm Bruner/Cott and Preservation Carpentry students at the North Bennet Street School. Damaged structural stonework was replaced using latex molded cast stone replicas from other parts of the building. Brownstone lintels and columns were replaced where necessary.[4]

In 2011, Boston architectural firm CUBE design + research was commissioned to complete a comprehensive restoration and conversion into multi-family housing.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Zaitzevsky, "A New Richardson Building" Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Volume XXXII, (May 1977), pg 164-166
  2. Boston Globe - August 7, 1994 Robert Campbell and Peter Vanderwarker
  3. Web site: You searched for education .
  4. Web site: Hayden Building . www.brunercott.com . 13 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061111190820/http://www.brunercott.com/library/hayden/hayden.htm . 11 November 2006 . dead.
  5. Web site: HAYDEN BUILDING CUBE . cubework.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121012044444/http://cubework.com/projects/hayden-building/ . 2012-10-12.