Physicians Building (1926)
2607 Fresno Street
The Physicians Building, designed and built in 1926 for
six Fresno physicians and surgeons, was the first such building in the Central
San Joaquin Valley conceived for the exclusive purpose of housing medical
examination offices and laboratory facilities. The practitioners in the
Physicians Building were involved in a variety of professional specialities,
including general surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics, and internal medicine. As a
group and individually, they made numerous distinguished contributions to the
growing city of Fresno. Among these achievements were Clinton Collins' service
as County Physician from 1915 to 1920, Angus B. Cowan's position as both County
Coroner and the leader of a community effort that secured accreditation for the
county hospital by the American Medical Association and the American College of
Surgeons in 1921, and Chester Vanderburgh's appointment as chief of the
surgical staff at Fresno General Hospital. From City of Fresno
Note that Dr. Jl Maupin helped found this building. We will meet another building of his later on.
The Physicians Building is located at Fresno and P Streets
in downtown Fresno. Although described at the time of its opening as being in
the "Spanish Style," it may be more accurately defined as an elegantly refined
blend of the various revival styles peculiar to California architecture during
the 1920s. Beyond the red-tiled roof and original, sheer white-washed walls,
the Physicians Building resists strict comparisons to the more common Spanish
Revival style. With its centralized axial plan, its dramatic and
classically-styled inner court, and its crisp angularity and characteristic
detail, the design suggests a more conscious adaptation of Palladian ideals.
The architect, Charles E. Butner, is known to
have been a proponent of the simple dignity of the Italianate manner, and his
architectural training in the Beaux Arts tradition at the University
Pennsylvania would support this claim.
The Physicians Building offers a particularly handsome
entrance elevation along Fresno Street. Its white stucco walls (over a brick
substructure) contrast with a typically-Californian red-tiled roof. Original
exterior details were markedly subtle: sash-type screened windows with full
cast projecting sills; a recessed arched entrance positioned on the central
axis, with a radial fan window over double french-style doors; a simple
chamferred projecting base that banded the entire building; and formal,
engraved lettering denoting "Physicians Building." Window trim and door
casements were painted an electric thalo blue-green, and the front six paired
windows were shielded by brilliantly striped canvas awnings--additions of raw
color reminiscent of the lively theatricality of mezzo-Mediterranean cultures.
At the time of its design and construction in 1926, the
Physicians Building consisted of some twenty-eight rooms, grouped into separate
office units that opened out onto an interior court. An octagonal fountain and
fish pond, some eight feet across and built of beige-colored stone, provided a
bench surface as well as atmospheric character for the central axis of the
medical building. Rising some eighteen feet above a floor surface of
highly-polished serpentine-green linoleum tile, a superbly detailed skylight
allowed natural light to filter into this large court space through
individually-set panes of pebbled glass installed below a clerestory roof. The
woodwork that made up the ceiling's structural element, built of some thirteen
inches of milled and layered double curves, was painted off-white. Eight
quarter columns with simple striped and banded crests at capital height, as
well as four corner columns, completed the formal symmetry of this elegant
medical reception area.
During the late 1960s, the Physicians Building suffered an
aesthetic injustice when it was "modernized" by individuals insensitive to its
architectural significance. The exterior was variously sheathed in
adobe-colored slump stone, the screens were eliminated, and the walls and trim
were painted in two shades of drab green. Such primary details as the front
french doors were replaced by "contemporary" sheer glass doors, and the
interior court was subdivided into additional office space with a narrow
hallway for access to the new rooms. The early magnificence of the central
court was literally covered over with the addition of a suspended acoustical
ceiling and fluorescent light panels. The fountain is reputed to have been
jack-hammered into small chunks of stone and hauled away. With the exception of
the missing screens, fountain, and french doors, however, the early integrity
of the Physicians Building remains intact.
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