Wollison-Shipton Building

Wollison-Shipton Building
Location 142-156 North St. Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°27′2″N 73°15′12″W / 42.45056°N 73.25333°W / 42.45056; -73.25333Coordinates: 42°27′2″N 73°15′12″W / 42.45056°N 73.25333°W / 42.45056; -73.25333
Built 1887 (1887)
Built by Munyon,D. C.
Architect Wilson,H. Neil
Architectural style Late Victorian
Part of Park Square Historic District (#75001911)
NRHP Reference # 82001899[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP September 30, 1982
Designated CP December 23, 1991

The Wollison-Shipton Building is a historic commercial and retail block at 142-156 North Street in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Designed by noted architect H. Neil Wilson, it was built in 1888 when the area north of Park Square developed as a commercial and retail part of downtown Pittsfield. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982,[1] and was included in an expansion of the Park Square Historic District in 1991.[2]

Description and history

The Wollison-Shipton Building stands in downtown Pittsfield, on the east side of North Street, roughly midway between Fenn and Eagle Streets. It is a four-story steel and masonry structure, built out of Philadelphia pressed red brick with rusticated brownstone trim. It has a central full-height section, seven bays wide, capped by a hip roof, which has flanking three-story mansarded wings. The ground floor has four storefronts, two on either side of the main building entrance, each now redone with modern plate glass display windows flanking recessed entrances. A belt course of sandstone separates the first and second floors, and brick pilasters separate the middle seven bays from the outer ones. Windows are rectangular sash, except for the central fourth-floor windows, where eight are set in round-arch openings. Windows in the outermost two bays on each side have stone sills, and are topped by a course of brickwork that extends across the width of the outer sections. In the central sections, the outer windows are grouped in threes, each individually topped by stone sills.[3]

At the time of its construction in 1888, this building was relative rarity for the type of brick used and for its cast iron detailing, which has since been removed. The second floor was the first home for the local YMCA. The architect was H. Neill Wilson, a prominent local architect, and the builder was D.C. Munyan, who was responsible for the construction of a number of other nearby buildings, including the adjacent Academy of Music (burned 1912), the Berkshire County Courthouse, and the Berkshire Athenaeum, both prominent structures on Park Square.[3]


See also

References

  1. 1 2 National Park Service (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. "NRHP boundary increase nomination for Park Square Historic District". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2013-11-27.
  3. 1 2 "MACRIS inventory record for Wollison-Shipton Building". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2013-11-28.
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