Saunders and Lawton

Saunderd and Lawton was an architectural firm with partners George Willis Lawton and Charles Willard Saunders active from 1898 until 1915 in Seattle, Washington. Other architects at the firm included Herman A. Moldenhour, Paul David Richardson, and J. Charles Stanley.[1] A later iteration of the firm was Lawton & Moldenhour.

Work

Charles Saunders

  • King County Courthouse #2 (1890–1891), First Hill, Seattle
  • Cascade School (1893–1894), Cascade, Seattle
  • Seattle Theatre #1 (1893), Downtown Seattle
  • Denny Hall, Arthur Hall and Mary Hall, (1893–1895) University of Washington, Seattle
  • The Bon Marché Department Store #2 (1896) Downtown Seattle

Saunders and Lawton

  • Stewart House (1898), Seattle
  • Alaska Building (1903–1904) at Pioneer Square in Seattle
  • Dairy Barn (1909) at the Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition (AYPE) in Seattle
  • Forestry Building (1908–1909) at the AYPE, later served as the home of the Washington State Museum until a bark beetle infestation was discovered
  • Women's Building (1908–1909) AYPE
  • Alhambra Theatre #2 (1909) downtown Seattle
  • Henry C. Chadwick House in Seattle
  • Cottage Project in Seattle
  • Crane Company warehouse and office building (1907), Pioneer Square, Seattle
  • Dunn Tin Storage Warehouse, Seattle
  • Dr. R.P. Lincoln Apartment House, Seattle,
  • Lumber Exchange Building (1902–1903) downtown Seattle[2]
  • Manufacturers Building (1905–1906), Pioneer Square, Seattle
  • Masonic Lodge (1915), First Hill, Seattle
  • Mottman Lodge, Seattle
  • Norton Building #1 (1904), Seattle
  • Northern State Hospital, Sedro-Woolley
  • Polson Building (1909–1910), Pioneer Square, Seattle
  • Rainier Club (1904), downtown Seattle
  • Seattle Buddhist Church #1 (1906–1908), First Hill, Seattle
  • Beacon Hill Elementary School #2 (1903–1904), Beacon Hill, Seattle
  • Walla Walla Elementary School (1902), Central District, Seattle
  • Monroe Correctional Complex, Monroe, Washington
  • Westland Building, Pioneer Square, Seattle[1] designed for Albert Hambach[3]

Lawton & Moldenhour

  • One or more buildings in Hawthorne Square, 4800 Fremont Avenue North in Seattle
  • Liggett Building (1927),[4] 1424 4th Avenue in Seattle

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.