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Saturday, September 2, 2006

The Marquette Building Has a Cornice Again



The cornice is returning to the Marquette Building at 314 North Broadway in St. Louis. At least, a fiberglass-based replication of some of the original cornice details is being installed by the Lawrence Group. The new cornice's bracket detailing matches the original, but the projecting frieze had detailing not present on the replica, on which that area is flat. Even an incomplete cornice replication is a novelty among historic rehabilitation projects these days, since few other developers replicate removed cornices. (Pyramid's recent renovations of the Curlee and Mallinckrodt buildings on Washington Avenue come to mind.)

Boatmen's Bank built the Marquette Building, then simply the Boatmen's Bank Building, in 1914 from plans by renowned local firm Eames & Young. Their headquarters at Fourth and Washington had been destroyed in a fire. An annex building was added in 1918 and expanded in 1920, but demolished in 1998 for a parking garage that was part of a terrible and failed plan to redevelop the Marquette Building. The Marquette is now under renovation for reuse as condominiums and the garage is part of the Federal Reserve Bank's "campus."

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