|

|
Central Steam Heat Plant
850 W. Steam Plant Alley |
|
HISTORIC
NAME
|
Central Steam Heat Plant |
| COMMON
NAME |
Steam Plant Square |
|
DATE
BUILT
|
1916 |
| ARCHITECT/BUILDER |
Cutter &
Malmgren |
| PROPERTY
STYLE |
Commercial
Vernacular |
| ON
THE SPOKANE REGISTER |
Yes - added 9/19/96 |
| ON
THE NATIONAL REGISTER |
No |
| IN
A DISTRICT |
Yes - added 12/96 |
| DISTRICT |
West Downtown Historic Transportation Corridor |
| NEIGHBORHOOD |
Riverside |
| STATEMENT
OF SIGNIFICANCE |
| One of Spokane's most prominent skyline features, the Central Steam Heat Plant, with its graceful twin smokestacks, is historically significant for its role in the evolution of the power industry in the Inland Northwest, and its seventy-year contribution to sustaining a major share of downtown Spokane's buildings. Built in 1916,
it provided heating to more than 300 Central Business District (CBD) structures. Designed by renowned Spokane
architects Cutter & Malmgren, the Steam Plant's architecture is notable, both for its engineering and design. It exhibits particular quality in its construction and attention to finished detail. The equipment was innovative in the Inland Northwest in 1916, when it
began operation. Representative of an enterprise common but frequently short-lived in a number of cities across the northern states, the plant underwent a series of changes in the generation of heat and power and remained operational until 1986.
after a period of vacancy it was renovated and reopened as Steam Plant
Square, offering unique restaurant, office, and commercial spaces. |
| Credits: Photo
by Tim Cannan, 2002 |

© 1997-2002 City of Spokane, Washington.
All Rights Reserved.
Last Date Modified: December 15, 2005
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