C4 East Oregonian/Hermiston Herald Wednesday, June 26, 2019 PROGRESS SPECIAL SECTION Staff photo by E.J. Harris A furnished studio apartment on display during an open house in the Bowman Building recently in Pendleton. Developers give historic buildings new life By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian UMATILLA COUNTY — At a June 14 open house, Pendle- ton developer Al Plute got to cel- ebrate a rare run of success. Some units were still under- developed, but Plute’s finished studio and one-bedroom apart- ments at the Bowman Building show his effort to convert old offices to upscale apartments is coming to fruition. Plute said he tried to save as many historic features of the third floor of the 17 S.W. Frazer Ave. building, which started its life as a hotel before it was con- verted to an office building in the late 20th century. Although the building has been in use since he’s owned it, he recently made the decision to convert the entire third floor to apartment units. Plute isn’t the only person who’s tried a hand at restoring an old building for modern use. The owners of Oregon Grain Growers Brand Distillery in Pendleton decided to turn an old car dealership at 511 S.E. Court Ave., into a combination restau- rant-liquor production facility in 2015 and are now one of the more popular dining establishments in town. And a group of business part- ners are in the midst of turning a vacated Elks Lodge into a per- formance venue and bar. The city’s been supporting these kinds of projects for years, Staff photo by E.J. Harris A one-bedroom apartment on display during an open house recently in the Bowman Building in Pendleton. but Plute has been the only one who has consistently been able to turn the downtown’s underused buildings into viable projects. The Pendleton Development Commission, a subsidiary of the city government, has studied the issue and found that most build- ing owners are too wary of the risks and effort to take the plunge on a seven-figure restoration. Within the downtown core, Plute has restored the St. George Plaza, the Brown Building, and the Bowman Building into mod- ern apartment complexes. Some projects have been more difficult than others. Plute said he acquired the St. George in 2008, and he’s still restoring a building that was in rough shape when he bought it, pointing to new mailboxes he recently installed at the 15 S.E. Emigrant Ave. building. Plute advised other developers looking into restoration to have a good idea of what they want out of the building before starting and applying for grants from the development commission if it’s within the downtown area. With three downtown res- toration projects nearly under his belt, he’s already aiming for another. Plute recently purchased the Odd Fellows building on Dorion Avenue with the plans to turn the empty upper story space into more upscale apartments. Hermiston developer Mitch Myers is on the same track. He renovated one of the city’s old- est buildings, the town’s origi- nal bank on the corner of Main Street and Highway 395, into mahogany-lined offices down- stairs and an Airbnb apartment upstairs. The apartment was restored as close to its 1910-era origins as possible, with Myers even tracking down a wallpaper com- pany that creates prints using the methods employed at the turn of the century. Myers has repurposed other century-old Hermiston build- ings, including an old coal stor- age facility he plans to lease to a restaurant and turning an old railroad storage facility into the Maxwell Siding Event Center. Rounding out restoration efforts in Hermiston, the Union Club of 1940s Hermiston is mak- ing a return later this year. The building at 140 N.E. Second St. has housed a wide variety of busi- nesses in its more than 100-year history — including, for a time, the offices of the East Oregonian — but will once again become the “Union Club,” a gathering space serving coffee by day and becoming a bar by night. WHERE QUALITY ALWAYS COMES FIRST! • Specialty Welding • Water Jetting/Sandblasting • Fabrication • Steel Sales • Certifi ed Welders CCB# 66293 541.567.7171 • 80496 N. HWY 395 • Hermiston • www.nwmetalfab.com COME SEE US F OR ALL YOUR POWDER COATING NEEDS: • Wheels • Truck Beds • Trailers • ATV’S • Motorcycles • Fencing • Railing GIVE US A CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE: 541.567.7171 80496 N. HWY 395 • Hermiston (Behind Oxarc)