Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutBryan, CS, A&M: An Architectural Tour; guidebook (Spring 1998)AN ARC TOUR STEPHEN FOX B R Y A N % The Bryan townsite was surveyed by Theodore Kosse, engineerfor the Houston & Texas Central Railway, on a 640-acre tract in Brazos County that the Brazoria County planter, WilliamJ. Bryan, a of Stephen F. Austin, had conveyed in 1860 for construction of the railroad line. The Houston & Texas Central was built to funnel the wealth of the Brazos River valley, the foremost cottonproduction area in Texas in the mid 19th century, through Houston. The outbreak of theCivil War halted railroad construction at Millican. in thesouthem part of Brazos County. The H&TC tracks did not reachBryan until 1866-67. The railroad passed through the t0wnsite in a north-south alignment and Kosse oriented Bryan's gridiron street plan the street grid on all sides of the original townsite, where it changes direction to confOrm to for a number of the townsites he surveyed for the Houston & Texas and Dallas. These included Hearne, Calvert, Bremond, Kosse, Thornton, Groesbeck, Mexfa, Rice, and Ennis. thoroughfare is faC- fact o ] on BRYAN Exit the Highway 6 Bypass at Briarcrest Drive head east and after a right on Boonville, proceed to Copperfield Drive. This is where Bryan most resembles College Station. A left onto Copperfield leads past Sam Houston Elementary School to the gated Courtlandt Place subdivision. On axis, at the end of the entrance street, is the newest contender for Bryan's grandest house, an enormous Highland Park style French chateau by Dallas architect Richard Drummond DaVis l t 999). Return on Boonville Road to William Joel Bryan Parkway, then turn right onto Boonville. At the Boonville-Ursuline~Osbom intersection is a vacant tract that has been the site of two of Bryan's most architecturally significant buildings. Both were destroyed by fire. The Villa Maria Ursuline ' · b Academy (1902), a g~rls school estabhshed y the Ursuline sisters of Galveston, occupied a Victorian N. J. Clayton of Gal 1929. acquired by the wholesale been in the taw at York archi corn driveway the only building in Texas by Delano & Aldrich. At 95 Allen Forest Lane, off Osborn, is the last in a series of houses built by several generations of the Allen fami- ly who operated Bryan's best- known 1 tion, Allen famil the Jr. built this 1952 ma~ of Mayfiek at toric Allen Prison ( 2 BRYAN is the campus's only remaining historic building, the Spanish Mediterranean swle Memorial Hall ( 1924), the work of A&M architecture professor Henry N. June. This is the then tO Hill, one of neighbor- writer, in at the end of the neigh - Bryan up tables in Nash refers small-town : that per[ains not only to Candy Hill but much of old Bryan. Proceeding west on Martin k~ther King leads one Freedmen where 3aptist Church ~ at 500 E. Martin and N. Houston congregation has .' since 1870 northern tier of Kosse's the historically AhScan- nt sector of live the torch at 504 aspect. ~ at 808 N. designed by College G. Woodcock; the steeple touch. Robert at W. Martin The complex public its conclusion, past the ex-Carver Elementary School (1949, Norton & Mayfield) and the ex- one finds that the 'rural of Sunny Nashs urban- rural" balance asserts itself with suprising rapidity. At with a kick roof over the 20th and 22nd were once part of the G. $. Parker the the on loes west-side storefronts in have been The Lawrence Shed of the Bryan Compress and Warehouse Co. complex in the 1000 block of N. Bryan Avenue (c. 193Os) is one of the most intact reminders of Bryan's identification with cotton and the railroad. The 6-bay, metal surfaced shed with its saw-toothed profiles is striking in its simplicity repetition. duplex cottages, a working landscape represent- ed by the cotton sheds and the railroad tracks. Adjoining the sheds pair of 1950 lures Martin Luther Associates des/ At 219 N. streetscape of Main 25th Next mark, the N. Main the Houston scalloped down Main Avenm the street. ;ector Varisco, the · Norton ;ible in panels : frets. small-town md stitu~ ewel & Trust Co. 200 N. Main this familybank; William J. Bryan's still connected with it. At 100 N Main and W. 26th (1915) Like the Varisco despite Malt tect 27t1 Main Ave. Street, at are due to (1998 The bi E. 26th to town plan. this that bisected by the this lack of city hall 26th ~ leavie Group David G. d was uare on Mathes through the 1930s, The Masonic building was designed by Flanders & eady 20th- but it was his son Charles a streamlined covered with porcelain 211 Hall in its Note : Grand of from Brazos the t track. ~ line to the ~ backs a Woolworth's to this spatial heir business shops, rather .' of downtown is St. ~at217W. build- tower is s Astin Memorial ~ Station archi- street at 216 1915. Oscar the along . The live oak and adja- Schulman Masonic Ave. ~ Street and N. 1922), designed by foremost eclectic ment of the I&GN tracks, harking back to an earlier era, Parker House Congress and W. 27th, a Victorian villa, its with a cast ora late 1860s, advance of the Millic~ gate cedar trees leading toward the Parker block of ~ behind the cottage at corrugated, House t professor Gerald its Side vernacular as ~ Swiss Avenue grand manner. Tucked within the I&GN track at 203 S the tiny Tern home to gregation the and his next block is the much mor~ Anthony's Catholic Sullivan as the Michele mer site of St. the at 308 W. 28th St, and S. an early now the dean ~ Movin tion made Tin one of the another A&M reptl- the and other territory the House (800 remodeled as following a Charles (800 Beck (a with her subsequent- Jr. had been Earl Merrell, Jr.) what was BRYAN town Bryan, the extensive. ly altered Brazos Scott abandoner Matthews's tribute to MacKie & Kamrath's St, E. Bryan designed D&o style 9th cen- mo house in Te Bryan's r ern building. side of tine is fairly centered wings been subsumed tlon Mirroring Bryan concrete I up to this buildings exhibits a~ ored reflective glass. Today Texas Avenue divides downtown from Bryan's east side neighborhoods as forcefully as the H&TC tracks Dallas Ave the early 2 20th century, 27th an grand avenue. was re- name of this urban into was t and publisher George W Ave. is the First Methodist Houston a stream. 1 with near the top direction on East Side a fOCUS Bryan. Another is that of Mrs. of the Astin ;mith at · was the home of Jr,, and is still The Edward St, (1902) contributes archi- class 1910) at615 E. 29th St. and S, Baker. The · of progressive the Dr. ~dchardson I 1 E. 29th. At Coulter Drive and E. 29th is the columned, by William E, 6 BRYAN Ave. l~ssell I 712 E. 30th St. scaled C. E. The '~illtam R. (1876) Haswell is Bryan's most all& of cedar front walk. Both and Mrs. Bryan's ~ pied the house Members Phillips Addition by C. at 508 E 30th St, and S, Hill W. Olin ! his House at 600 E. story French S. Ennis St. and E al style J, partner J. B. & Harris on the School (1939) at 801 Austin Giesecke Near it, of~ trict is the 1 E. 31 st and S. Haswell, moved to this site in 1984 and restored by Dr~ and Mrs. J. Russell Bradley. AtE. 31st! Texas Ave. i' Clinic (1950), Frank Texas Ave. is the J, H. Conway House, the last of the old"Coltege Avenue'' grand avenue houses. one are & tec - & studio :, leads 1940s gt is House Rowlett) of Bryan archi- tin a jour- the ~reen and by 1 to the faced BRYAN 7 undeveloped territory On the southeastside of town. This i~ makes mate ( 1961 which Corer, Matthews & ~ and Home for Villa B. Thompson of McGinnis Cavitt ] Highway 6 ~now lng com first of the subdivisions Wayside Dr. is 1959) by an especially Ma Lan¸ D. Mayfield, Jr, four-story, & Loan, Chartier C. turalb 998. Partners ~ and James H Jr., of the same across 2909-2919 :A956), Clinic · Scott & clerestory hand roof overhangs. : (c. 1953, at 3500 S. its flat roof. framed both sides of the street builder, developer, and this was the 2RS partners as J. Olexa, Tiny landscape aed area (no longer .pitched ge Station Dr. is architecture studio roof deck. in 1958, Matthews's Bryan and faculty and W. firm designed by Frederick W. sot of house at 100 E. ] was the architect H. Davi Brooksi, Scott & House ~ The combination of lime- stone, wood, and brick iden- tifies the contemporary style Brazos A. Varisco House at 415 E. Brookside (c. 1952) as the work of Norton & Mayfidd. Bryan's first modern house is the now slightly altered Margaret Pearce House (I941) at 303 Crescent Dr. by Houston architects MacKie & Kamrath. The most stun- ning modern house in North Oakwood is the Clifton C. Carter House at 411 Crescent Dr. (1956), designed by Carter. an LBJ architectur, Crescent Drive i (I 946), the mo {c. 1952), On the, leads to the and the Andrew L. Ogg House (c. 1954} at 801 Tanglewood by William E. Nash with Harry S. Ransom, which displays a sectionally activated profile. Across S. Texas Ave. from North ~ unassuming entrance strip shop- of which is the 726 N the in San major und the Philip modern Associates BRYAN 9 TEXAS A&M UNIVE TY a group of of Bryan In 1931, access to 20th century. But tahey stone, and metals. In ' program of a disci- through campus on most role in a de got financed a wave Philippe Cret of Giesecke. a symbolize since ~ detail in University and the 10 tec~s department To the F.] pro- were now cam- Abutting the oration presence giate ~ col- San Antonio, Ford. consumed linked quadrangles the west is a Turning east especially aware Hensel's lost its Scoates Hall with Industries Vosper's appear ~ axis is Hensel mome palace. ~ is the lawn d Study Fieldi the (1995 of Dallas, of Dallas, Dallas, a also The Houstorl seem C O L L E G E T A T I O N A&M College. Until group of faculty members of the campus. It a subdivision at East Gate and the new H staff. From opposite the campus pus in an array of The campus was in the y 1920s a south late 1930s, and institu- N. Main St. In almost entirely by Langford, professor 1929 until 1956, it to build quite substantial in size. the El 16 COLLEGE STATION A&M Lawyer, with Ernest CRSqike use of hard treatment is tO ~John Thorpe. No~h Gate is the and N. Coll~ with Milto~ and N. Church is Texas no the brick, 401-405 University and the City bilitate North Gate.' Universit~ commercialized. San Timber Lane leads through Newton, Adjoining is CanterbUry House (1975) by David Brith Hillel and E, Dexter ~W, and Daniel many Simpson Cent~ was have been Station, ly stood britliantl' ~re those ~oose scree Lee in a r 18 [CO on architec- at 511 t 504 Park Place S. ~ of cat- tie, College Park launched Professor Clark on a long career as one of College Station's fore- most residential real estate developers. Station architect Rodney C. Hill, Around the corner, above Rother's Bookstore in the $Out~ide community Center at 340 George Bush Dr. and Montclair (c, 1938), is the Second- floor office space where Bill Caudilt and john M ROwlett set up what would become Caudil~ ~lOwlett Scott in 1947. House (1957)is at 1200 enclave descends at 1206 on its site to Caudill House and it,, nicate the spli~level angford, past the CRS. The Knoll. bythe visible from COL£E6E ~TATI~ONI 19 sive house A&M, Tin H (1989), Foley's Scott & W lite Clinic Post 20 COLLr~GE CoTATION