A. Warren Gould

Augustus Warren Gould (January 15, 1871 - October 15, 1922[1]) was an architect in Boston and Seattle, as well as surrounding areas of the Pacific Northwest including Canada. Gould was born in Nova Scotia, in Canada. He moved from Boston to Seattle by 1905. His firm's work in downtown Seattle included the American Savings Bank and Empire buildings (1906) which were the second and third concrete reinforced structures in the United States ever built.[2] He also designed the King County Courthouse in downtown Seattle. Gould was not formally trained as an architect. His background was in building and contracting.[3]

Empire and American Bank building
Arctic Building in Seattle
One of the terra cotta walruses adorning the Arctic Building. There was also a polar bear

Early life

Gould was born in Nova Scotia, Canada in 1872.[4] He took classes at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Career

Gould worked in the Boston area before coming to Seattle.[4] He designed several commercial buildings in downtown Seattle including the County-City Building, American Savings Bank and adjoining Empire Building (2nd Avenue and Madison), and the Standard Furniture Company building on 2nd and Pine.[4] He was involved in supervising the construction of the YWCA building in Seattle in partnership with Edouard Frere Champney. Their partnership lasted from 1909 until 1912.[5] He also designed buildings for Vancouver, British Columbia and in the cities of Aberdeen and Tacoma in Washington state as well as residences across the Northwest.[4] He also originated the municipal plans amendment to the city charter and was responsible for the creation of the Municipal Plans Commission. He was elected the president of the Washington State Society of Architects in 1917 and was appointed a member of the state architects' examining board in 1919.[4]

There was controversy over his winning bid for the King County Courthouse.[6]

He was a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Washington Chapter and was a charter member of the Washington State Society of Architects. He was appointed by Governor Louis F. Hart to the Washington State Examining Board of Architects.[1]

Work

  • Empire building and adjacent American Savings Bank building (demolished by 1983)
  • Arctic Club Building (1916), now the DoubleTree Arctic Club Hotel
  • Pioneer Square Hotel (1917)
  • Broadacres Building (1907), sold for $25 million in 2016 with plans being developed for a building cantilevered over it.[7]
  • Seller Building (1906)[8]
gollark: If you just use a pulse per second output from a GPS receiver for generic whatever it's fine. If you want to actually find your position then it would be bad.
gollark: But they do transmit the offset.
gollark: They use TAI, which doesn't have leap seconds at all.
gollark: No trigonometry somehow, just vector maths.
gollark: The speed of light is such that if they were off by a fraction of a second the distances would probably be unusably wrong.

References

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