place

Railway Exchange Building (Portland, Oregon)

1910 establishments in OregonBuildings and structures completed in 1910Buildings and structures in Portland, OregonNational Register of Historic Places in Portland, OregonOregon stubs
Southwest Portland, Oregon
Railway Exchange Building (Oregon Pioneer Bldg) from NE in 2019
Railway Exchange Building (Oregon Pioneer Bldg) from NE in 2019

The Railway Exchange Building is a historic building in Portland, Oregon, also known as the Oregon Pioneer Building. The structure houses the restaurant Huber's.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Railway Exchange Building (Portland, Oregon) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Railway Exchange Building (Portland, Oregon)
Southwest Harvey Milk Street, Portland Downtown

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Railway Exchange Building (Portland, Oregon)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.52023 ° E -122.675022 °
placeShow on map

Address

Marriott

Southwest Harvey Milk Street 320
97204 Portland, Downtown
Oregon, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Railway Exchange Building (Oregon Pioneer Bldg) from NE in 2019
Railway Exchange Building (Oregon Pioneer Bldg) from NE in 2019
Share experience

Nearby Places

Bishop's House (Portland, Oregon)
Bishop's House (Portland, Oregon)

Bishop's House is a historic building in downtown, Portland, Oregon. It is in the city's Yamhill Historic District. When the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese was moved to Portland from Oregon City. Archbishop William Hickley Gross constructed the Bishop's House as his official residence. Part of the property the cathedral was built upon was donated by Benjamin Stark. Seventeen years later, in 1879, the Bishop's House, the official residence of Archbishop William Hickley Gross, was constructed next door. Both the cathedral and the Bishop's House were built in the neo-Gothic style. The granite foundation of Bishop's House was quarried in Northern Montana and transported down the Columbia River. By 1878, noting the size limitations of the then-existing cathedral and the expanding population into the area, "the need for a new, more elegant cathedral became apparent." Dedication of the new pro-cathedral site, situated at 15th & Davis, occurred in 1885.Plans and construction, however, were already underway to construct a new episcopal residence next-door to the existing cathedral. The Bishop's House was completed in 1879. It did not, however, become the official episcopal residence until 1893 and then for only two years. By then, the new pro-cathedral construction was completed and the cathedral next door was demolished in February 1895. The episcopal residence was moved to near the new pro-cathedral the same month.A major renovation took place in 1965, and Bishop's House was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. As of 2001, the building was occupied by offices, a Lebanese restaurant, and a startup named in its honor, Bishop House, LLC.