|

|
Schade Brewery
528 E. Trent Avenue |
|
HISTORIC
NAME
|
Schade Brewery |
| COMMON
NAME |
Schade Tower |
|
DATE
BUILT
|
1902-1903, 1907,
1934-37 |
| ARCHITECT/BUILDER |
Lewis Stritesky, G.A.
Pehrson |
| PROPERTY
STYLE |
Industrial |
| ON
THE SPOKANE REGISTER |
Yes - added 10/93 |
| NATIONAL REGISTER |
No |
| IN
A DISTRICT |
Yes - added 12/8/94 |
| DISTRICT |
No |
| NEIGHBORHOOD |
East Central |
| STATEMENT
OF SIGNIFICANCE |
| The Schade Brewery as it stands
today was constructed in four phases: ca. 1902, 1903, 1907 and
1934-37. The old Schade Brewery provides a prominent physical
reminder of past social, industrial, and architectural eras. It is
a striking landmark, and a local manifestation of national
trends.
The building takes its name from Bernhardt
Schade, the brewmaster who had the building erected in 1903.
Schade served as assistant brewmaster at another Spokane brewery, the
New York Brewery, for a decade prior to establishing his own brewing
operation. In 1903 he bought the entire oversized city block on
East Trent from a Mr. Frost. Included in the purchase was a cold
storage building Frost was constructing on the site. Schade hired
the architect Lewis Stritesky, designer of the prominent Westminster
Apartments at 2301 W. Pacific in Spokane, to design a facility based on
drawings of a European brewery. Stritesky created a new western
addition for the building begun by Frost. A bottling building and
steam/pump house were also built on the property. Initial
production was 35,000 to 40,000 barrels a
year. |
| Credits: Photo by Tim
Cannan, 2002 |

© 1997-2002 City of Spokane, Washington.
All Rights Reserved.
Last Date Modified: December 20, 2005
|