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Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition (Seattle, Wash.), Manufactures Building, end elevation and transverse section
Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition (Seattle, Wash.), Manufactures Building, end elevation and transverse section
TitleAlaska Yukon Pacific Exposition (Seattle, Wash.), Manufactures Building, end elevation and transverse section
Architectural Firm NameHoward & Galloway
ArchitectsHoward, John Galen, 1864-1931
Galloway, John Debo, 1869-1943
Champney, Edouard Frere, 1874-1929
Somervell, W. Marbury, 1872-1939
Cote, Joseph S., b. 1874
Associate ArchitectSomervell & Cote
Date of Drawing Execution1907
Object TypeArchitectural drawings
Physical DescriptionBlueprint: 73 x 100 cm.
Building Street AddressUniversity of Washington
Building LocationUnited States--Washington (State)--Seattle
PurposeWorking drawings
RepresentationElevations
Sections
Descriptive NotesWritten in title block:
Manufactures Building A.Y.P. Exposition
End Elevation and Section
Sommerville & Cote, Associate Architects
Howard & Galloway, Supervising Architects

Building: 1
Sheet: 5
Date: Oct. 5, 07

Scale: 1/8" to 1'
Building StyleBeaux-Arts
Building NotesIn 1909 Seattle hosted its first World's Fair on the University of Washington campus - the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (AYP). The AYP attracted more than 3.5 million visitors from around the world, giving Seattle much-needed prominence and attention as a leader in Pacific trade. The layout of the Exposition and its buildings were partly funded by the state legislature, so that they could later be used by the University. The San Francisco firm of Howard & Galloway was responsible for the design supervision of the fair's official buildings and sent their chief designer, Eduard Champney, to oversee the entire project. Local architectural firms were chosen to design some of the individual buildings. At the center of the Exposition was an area called the Arctic Circle, which featured six white buildings that arched around a mall and two fountains with a view of Mt. Rainier in the distance. Of these six, the Manufacturing Building, designed by W. Sommerville and Joseph Cote, housed the nation's largest industrial exhibition where methods of production were on display. It was torn down around 1918.
Subjects (LCTGM)Elevations; Sections
Subjects (LCSH)Manufactures Building (Seattle, Wash.); Exhibition buildings--Washington (State)--Seattle--Designs and plans; Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909 : Seattle, Wash.)
Digital CollectionArchitecture Collection
Digital ID NumberARC0011
Ordering InformationRestrictions apply to the ordering of this image. Please contact photos@u.washington.edu for more information.
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division.
Repository CollectionU.W. Architect. Accession No. 73-28, Folder 13
Digital Reproduction InformationScanned from original drawing in RGB at 200-400 dpi, saved in TIFF format, changed to indexed color, enhanced and resized using Adobe Photoshop, and imported as JPEG2000 using Contentdm software's JPEG2000 Extension. 2006.
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