Tempe Historic Property Survey

| Survey Number: |
HPS-149 |
| Name: |
Ellingson Warehouse |
| Location: |
Demolished/formerly at 24 W. 7th Street |
| Year Built: |
1909 |
| Architectural Style: |
Industrial |
The Ellingson Grain Warehouse was significant as the last remaining historic brick
warehouse in Tempe at the time that it was destroyed by a fire. Built in 1909 by Mons
Ellingson, a prominent Tempe rancher, farmer, and land owner, this warehouse was part of
an original complex of buildings comprising Ellingson's grain, feed, and seed business.
Ellingson, a native of Norway, established a homestead in 1881 at what is now Southern and
Mill avenues in Tempe. He grew alfalfa and grains, and raised cattle. In the early 1900s,
he expanded into the feed and seed business to facilitate processing of grains grown in
the Tempe area. The grain business continued until about 1921, after which the building
was used as an arsenal, a storehouse, and an industrial building. Downtown redevelopment
plans had called for preserving the structure, but it was destroyed by fire in the
mid-1980s.
The Ellingson Warehouse was a rectangular (50 ft. x 100 ft.) one-story brick structure
with a gable roof and parapets. Although it was located on the northeast corner of 6th
Street and Maple, the building was entered from the east or north through large sliding
wooden doors with round arch openings. The roof was framed with wooden trusses. The gables
(north and south) had stepped parapets. The bricks were laid in common bond and a stuccoed
apron had been added at the base of the walls. The floor of the warehouse was concrete. An
office had been added in the southeast corner with an entry through the south façade. A
late shed porch extended to the north.
Go to Tempe
Historic Property Survey
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