Titche–Goettinger Building Explained

Titche–Goettinger Building
Nrhp Type:cp
Partof:Dallas Downtown Historic District
Partof Refnum:04000894
Coordinates:32.7906°N -96.795°W
Map Label:Titche–Goettinger Building
Locmap Relief:yes
Area:less than one acre
Architect:George L. Dahl, Herbert M. Greene; Greene, LaRoche, & Dahl
Added:May 24, 1996
Designated Nrhp Type:August 11, 2006
Refnum:96000586
Designated Other1 Abbr:DLMKHD
Designated Other1 Color:
  1. F5DEB3
Designated Other1 Date:February 28, 1990[1]
Designated Other1 Number:H/48 (Harwood HD)
Designated Other1 Num Position:bottom

The Titche–Goettinger Building is one of Dallas' original broad-front department stores located along St. Paul Street between Main and Elm Street in downtown Dallas, Texas (USA). The structure currently houses apartments, retail space, and the Universities Center at Dallas. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places both individually and as a contributing property in the Dallas Downtown Historic District and is a Dallas Landmark as part of the Harwood Street Historic District. It is also located across the street from Main Street Garden Park.

History

In 1902, Edward Titche formed a partnership with Max Goettinger and the two established Titche–Goettinger, a department store, on the southeast corner of Elm and Murphy Streets in downtown Dallas.[2] By 1904, operations had outgrown the Elm/Murphy location and the store moved to the year-old Wilson Building.[2] [3] By 1928, the store had again outgrown itself and construction began on a new building two blocks east in an area known as "Uptown".

Located along St. Paul between Elm and Main, the new flagship building designed by architect George Dahl opened in November 1929 as one of the largest department stores in the Southwest. It consisted of seven floors plus basement and sub-basement. The exterior was clad in Indiana Limestone with Italian Florentine detail in Renaissance Revival style, while the inside featured Art Deco design elements.

The interior of the building was set up like current department stores of its day.[4] The basement was used as a retail space featuring "popularly priced" merchandise. The first floor sold impulse goods such as gloves, hats, purses and hosiery. It featured a patterned terrazzo floor and eighteen foot ornamental ceiling. Columns had ornamental capitals with Texas-motifs. The second floor sold women's and misses' clothes as well as furs and featured differently themed "galleries".[5] Children's clothes and lingerie were located on the third floor, originally decorated with peach and apricot colors. House wares such as rugs, draperies, and furniture were on the fourth floor. The fifth floor featured glass ware and china, and the employee restrooms and hospital. The offices were on the sixth floor. On the seventh floor was a 600-seat auditorium that could also be converted into four small conference spaces. A basement and sub-basement held the mechanical equipment as well as a state-of-the-art refrigerated fur vault that could hold up to 3,000 fur coats. The cooling system cooled the basement and first floor.[6]

Expansion

In 1955 the building doubled in size with the opening of a "Texas-size" major addition along Main between St Paul and Harwood designed by Thomas, Jameson & Merrill.[2] This addition matched the original building in height, depth and building materials, although the façade was windowless and featured a large cartouche and prominent signage. The addition also boasted the first complete escalator service for a building of its size in the Southwest and the largest plate glass windows at street level. The expanded 500000square feet department store boasted three restaurants, a bakery and a 1,600-seat public auditorium.

In the 1960s and '70s the chain was more well known as Titche's.

The store took on the Joske's name in 1979. In 1985 Allied Stores consolidated Joske's three Texas divisions, and the top three floors of the building were converted to corporate offices. The store connected its retail concourse to the expanding Dallas Pedestrian Network during a renovation of the basement, first and second floors in 1986.[7] When Dillard's bought the assets of Joske's in 1987, the historic downtown building was not included in the sale; the store was closed soon after.[8]

Adaptive reuse

In 1994, developer Graham Greene and architect Meckfessel Associates renovated the 1955 addition as the Dallas Education Center (now known as the Universities Center at Dallas).[2] The UCD was the first multi-institutional teaching center (MITC) for higher education in Texas and was established by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to provide access to public higher education at the upper division and graduate levels to citizens who live and work in downtown Dallas. Four of the seven floors have been converted to classroom space and are used by Texas A&M University-Commerce, Texas Woman's University (TWU), University of North Texas (UNT), University of Texas at Arlington (UTA), Dallas County Community College District (DCCCD) and 9th-12th grade of the Pegasus School of Liberal Arts & Sciences. The facility also contains Fashion on Main, the exhibition facility of UNT's Texas Fashion Collection. Future plans include expansion of the fashion gallery. The current address for this portion of the building is 1901 Main.

The building was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1996.

As one of the first residential renovations in downtown Dallas, Oglesby-Green adapted the original 1929 building into 129 loft-style apartments and retail space in 1997.[2] To provide adequate light to interior apartments a section of the building on floors 2-8 was cut away, but the façade was left intact (this is evident when viewing the rows of open windows along Main). The eighth floor of apartments is the old "attic" space facing the interior courtyard and is only accessible via stairs from the seventh floor. Resident parking is accommodated in the basement and sub-basement levels. Many of the original finishes were incorporated into the renovation where practical, making each unit unique in design (units feature original windows and decorative columns, and one unit incorporates the old ballroom's stage). The lobby features many historical photographs and artifacts of the building's past. For several years in the late 1990s a portion of the lobby contained the Gold Bar and restaurant Champagne;[9] vestiges still remain of old bar and department store features throughout the building. The current address for this portion of the building is 1900 Elm.

UNT purchased the Universities Center at 1901 Main with plans to expand program offerings. Because the building shares parking and other critical services with 1900 Elm, UNT also purchased the apartment building and offers a reduced rate to full-time students, thus reunifying the historic building under one ownership.

On May 14, 2009, the Texas Legislature approved UNT's request for a public law school in the neighboring Dallas Municipal Building. The Universities Center will be home of the new law school until the renovated building is ready for occupancy.

Design details

Zoned schools

Residents are zoned to schools in the Dallas Independent School District. Zoned schools include City Park Elementary School,[10] Billy Earl Dade Middle School,[11] and James Madison High School.[12]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ordinance No. 30812. Larry E. Casto. March 31, 2018. City of Dallas. August 4, 2018.
  2. http://www.dallaslibrary.org/ Dallas Public Library
  3. http://www.dallaslibrary.org/ Dallas Public Library
  4. Ferry, John William. A History of the Department Store, p.14
  5. Dallas Times Herald, Nov. 24, 1929
  6. Web site: Details for Titche–Goettinger Department Store . Texas Historic Sites Atlas.
  7. Donna Steph Hansard. (1986, August 21). JOSKE'S PLANNING RENOVATION. The Dallas Morning News HOME FINAL ed., 2D. Retrieved December 16, 2009 from NewsBank on-line database (America's Newspapers)
  8. Donna Steph Hansard. (1987, April 14). DILLARD TO BUY OUT JOSKE'S - 2nd chain included in $255 million sale. The Dallas Morning News HOME FINAL ed., 1a. Retrieved December 16, 2009 from NewsBank on-line database (America's Newspapers)
  9. Dallas Morning News, October 31, 1997
  10. "Fall 2009 City Park Elementary School Attendance Zone." Dallas Independent School District. Retrieved on May 23, 2010.
  11. "Fall 2009 Dade Middle School Attendance Zone." Dallas Independent School District. Retrieved on May 23, 2010.
  12. "Fall 2009 James Madison High School Attendance Zone." Dallas Independent School District. Retrieved on May 23, 2010.