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Resolution 7152
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Resolution 7152
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Last modified
8/11/2017 11:20:17 AM
Creation date
8/11/2017 11:20:10 AM
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Resolutions
Resolution Number
7152
Date
8/9/2017
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2 <br /> E) Property Description <br /> Below are plan view drawings of the building: mezzanine, main floor with major landscaping <br /> retaining walls, and basement. <br /> 52' 33' :t 23'19' 5' <br /> Mezz <br /> 1040 s.f, <br /> A <br /> RFX <br /> 1 sMas <br /> 52' Cone <br /> Slab 546 s.f. <br /> 3796 s.f. <br /> B <br /> 3796 s.f. <br /> A <br /> 38' 14' 52' <br /> 18' <br /> tk <br /> lb <br /> s>tr•� <br /> 414 <br /> - <br /> * <br /> The Bank of Everett ca. 1960s <br /> The Bank of Everett building was located in a prominent downtown location at the intersection <br /> of California Street and Wetmore Avenue. The area was a hub of activity in 1962 when most <br /> shopping activity for the local area was concentrated downtown. Nearby were other banks, <br /> department stores, fraternal organizations, county and city government buildings, and major <br /> churches of Everett. <br /> The building style is New Formalism, which emerged in the 1960s as a rejection to the rigid <br /> form of Modernism. The style was a 20th century effort to wed the building forms of the past <br /> with new forms enabled by advances in building technology. In the Pacific Northwest, New <br /> Formalism was applied mainly to banking institutions, auditoriums, libraries, and museums. <br /> Note the repetition of the arch motif, the umbrella shell roof overhang that is a heavy, <br /> projecting slab, and brick walls that are typical of New Formalism. <br />
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