HASTINGS BUILDING
an historic landmark
 
 
 
A Bright Future
The Hastings Building is located in Port Townsend’s downtown Historic Commercial District.  This beautiful example of Elmer H. Fisher Victorian architecture has two upper floors which are ready for restoration to suit your business needs.
 
Each of the upper floors has approximately 3,500 square feet of restorable space.  These upper floors are waiting for the right tenant(s) so their restoration can take shape.  If that tenant is you, we will work with you to ensure that the resulting spaces meet your needs while using green building practices wherever possible. We believe that is our responsibility, as stewards of our ecosystem and of our community.
 
We’re looking for businesses with a long-term vision of contributing to a thriving healthy community.  If your vision includes moving to a location which offers business owners, employees and residents a quality of life beyond compare, contact our Property Manager by email at heather@hastingsestate.com or by phone at (360) 385-3264.
 
A Brief History
 
Construction on Elmer H. Fisher’s design for the Hastings Building began in 1889 and was completed in 1890.  The morning Leader observed in November 1889 that the Hastings Building, still under construction, was “conceded by all to be the most elegant building in the city.”  It went on to enumerate such progressive features as the two interior staircases, wainscoting of redwood, and the unusually large (96”x100”) plate glass to be used on the first floor storefronts.
 
By the time construction began on the Hastings Building, Port Townsend was less dependent upon building materials brought in by ship.  The cast iron columns at street level, seen to particular advantage flanking the handsome west entry, were cast by the Port Townsend Foundry, which had been established in 1883.  Of all the materials used in construction, only the ceilings of the main floor stores, patented embossed iron that imitated decorative plaster and was currently thought to be “fireproof,” is recorded as being imported (these were from Northrup Company in Pittsburgh).  The morning Leader reported that “It has double floors throughout; the offices are all large and provided with every convenience and are arranged for either gas or electricity.”  Such amenities, not available in earlier Port Townsend office buildings, assured a full complement of tenants.  The highly desirable corner location was occupied by a real estate office, which shared the ground floor with Enoch F. Plummer, “Cigars, Tobacco, Confectionary, and Smokers’ Articles,” Max Gerson Dry Goods, and Jarrett T. Lewis Co.
 
A real estate office, an investment broker, accountants, physicians, and an architect originally occupied the upper floors of the building.  These offices opened into an interior court with a skylight: an innovative plan used here for the first time in Port Townsend and similarly replicated in Henry Yesler’s Pioneer Building (another E. H. Fisher building in Seattle’s Pioneer Square).  During World War II, the U.S. Army converted the upper floors of the Hastings Building to apartments for officers assigned to Fort Worden.  After the war, the upper floors went vacant until the 1960’s when they were used for the
Port Townsend Summer School of the Arts, a forerunner to Centrum.  Since that time the upper floors have returned to their vacant status and have remained vacant to the present.
 
Various tenants have consistently occupied the main floor over the years.  Current tenants include the Roche Gallery, Ryk’s Custom Jewelry, About Time (a women’s and children’s clothing store), and Frameworks.
 
 
The back of the Hastings Building and the site of the new Hastings Landing, pictured from Union Wharf.
The building features an advertising space, available for Victorian-era billboard painting.
The atrium is topped by a skylight which, when the restoration is complete, will run across its full length and provide a stunning sense of light.  Note that the offices facing the hall have windows that give an exterior feel to interior spaces.
The conservative Romanesque style architecture of the Hastings Building makes it a dominant part of the downtown Port Townsend skyline. The magnificent bay windows in the second and third floors give the structure a massive undulating form.
This fireplace is located in one of the existing offices. Inlaid with Italian marble, this feature makes a statement of elegant quality which we will strive to preserve throughout the restoration.
Beautiful bays overlook the intersection of Taylor and Water Streets in Historic
Port Townsend, WA. The original design of the building included a spired cupola atop this northeastern bay, which we hope to recreate in the final phase of the building restoration.
photo by David Whitfield
photo by David Whitfield
photo by David Whitfield
photo by Joe Lipka
photo by Barney Burke
photo by Harry Dudley