Banco de Ponce (building)

The Banco de Ponce building, a historic building in Ponce, Puerto Rico, was the first and main office of Banco de Ponce until the company merged with Banco Popular in 1990. Though its headquarters had moved to a presumptuous building in Hato Rey's Milla de Oro by then, Banco de Ponce continued to consider this building its main office, until the company merged with Banco Popular in 1990. The building was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on June 25, 1987. It was built in 1924.[2]

Banco de Ponce
The Banco de Ponce building on Plaza Degetau
Location of Ponce and the bank building in Puerto Rico
LocationAmor and Comercio Sts., Plaza Degetau, Ponce, Puerto Rico
Coordinates18°00′40″N 66°36′48″W
Arealess than one acre
Built1924
ArchitectFrancisco Porrata Doria
Architectural styleBeaux-Arts
NRHP reference No.87001003[1]
Added to NRHPJune 25, 1987

Location

The building is located facing Plaza Degetau. The large structure occupies a small city block. It is bounded by Mayor, Francisco Parra Duperon (also known as Comercio), Marina, and Amor streets. Amor street was also called Callejon Amor, or Amor Alley; literally, Love Alley. In 1991, Amor street was converted into a promenade and renamed Paseo Antonio Arias Ventura, after the long-time employee of the bank who started as a custodian and rose to become the bank's general manager.

Architecture

The building's architect was Francisco Porrata Doria.[3]

The Banco de Ponce building is a four-story brick and concrete structure. As it is set in a very narrow triangular lot defined by near-parallel Amor and Comercio Streets, the architect's solution to the lot's footprint geometry was the development of a continuous facade enveloping these two streets and the narrow front to Plaza Las Delicias.[4]

The predominant style is related to the Beaux art neoclassical, with three horizontal bands defining this wraparound facade. The base is made of a pinkish stone extracted from a quarry close to the city. This stone has been commonly used in other Ponce buildings.[4]

The second and third floors house bank office. "These are rendered in elaborate plasterwork with square Corinthian columns, brackets, medallions and panels between the structural beams ornamented with paterae. Naturalistic motifs are ubiquitous."[4] For a while, the building's third floor was used as a ballroom for Ponce's old casino.[5]

Contemporary use

In 1990, at the time of the merger between Banco de Ponce and Banco Popular, Banco de Ponce continued to operate at this building as Banco de Ponce, but eventually the BanPonce Corporation branded all of its branches with the Banco Popular name. Subsequently, the building was sold to Scotiabank, the Canadian concern, but later Banco Popular switched with Scotiabank the Banco de Ponce building, and Banco Popular has been using it since as its downtown Ponce branch.[6] Today, the first floor of the building houses a branch of Banco Popular. The fourth floor houses Banco Popular's regional offices and the Commercial Banking Center.

gollark: Not sure if it works on the coral ones though.
gollark: I investigated, and there are some which can actually be *trained* on TPUs, yay.
gollark: Troubling!
gollark: (inference only, I could run training if necessary)
gollark: <@231856503756161025> TPU GPT-2 compatibility?!

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 9 July 2010.
  2. Build year (Historic Architecture in the Caribbean Islands By Edward E. Crain. ISBN 0-8130-1293-7. The University Press of Florida. 1994.)
  3. "Architect". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2009.
  4. Banco de Ponce. National Register of Historic Places. NRHP Focus Database Listing # 87001003. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
  5. United States Dept of the Interior, National Park Service. National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form, Banco de Ponce. Number 87001003. (May 19, 1987)Page 3
  6. Municipalities / Ponce, Former Banco de Ponce. Encyclopedia Puerto Rico. Retrieved 30 June 2012.

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