Tempe Historic Property Survey

Survey Number: HPS-244
Name: Tempe Hardware Building
Location: 520 S. Mill
Year Built: 1898
Architectural Style: Late Victorian/
Panel Brick Commercial


The Tempe Hardware Building, constructed in 1898, is the oldest remaining three-story brick commercial building from the Territorial period in Maricopa County. It was an important focus of the commercial, social, political and religious life of Tempe in the early twentieth century. The cornerstone of the Odd Fellows Building was laid with great ceremony on April 14, 1898. The Odd Fellows, and other fraternal organizations, were a favored method of community fellowship in Tempe, and both men and women often belonged to several groups at once. The ballroom in the new building was used by the Masonic Lodge, Pythian Sisters, American Legion, Rotary Club, Good Templars, and many other social groups. The ballroom and its weekly dances became central to the early social life of the community. The building was also used for political meetings and speeches, and its many rooms had served as Tempe City Council chambers, the Church of Latter Day Saints, and headquarters for the Salt River Valley Water Users Association. The first businesses to occupy the ground floor of the building were short-lived hardware companies, but in 1906, M. E. Curry, George L. Compton, and B. B. Moeur formed the Tempe Hardware Company, which occupied the building for more than 70 years. The business closed in 1976, making it one of the oldest continuously operated businesses in Tempe history. The building was rehabilitated in 1982, and has since been occupied by various offices and commercial retail businesses.

The Tempe Hardware Building is a three-story brick structure, rectangular in plan, with the main facade facing on Mill Ave. The façade is divided into three bays with a continuous brick cornice across the top. The north and south edges of the façade are articulated with brick pilasters on the upper stories and stone on the ground level. The central bay features a semicircular cut stone arch supported on stone piers. Brick rises from the springline of the arch with paired, arched, double-hung windows on the second and third floors. A long, low segmental arch of rusticated bricks tops the central bay. Original double entry doors no longer remain, but the original transom light frame is intact. The remaining north and south bays are identical and recessed. There is a storefront on each ground level bay; the original wood and glass elements have been replaced with aluminum and brick. Original elements on the second and third floors consist of smooth brick wall planes, rusticated brick band courses at the sill lines, triplicate double-hung windows with rusticated brick flat arches on the second floor and round arched double-hung windows with rusticated brick on the third floor. Internally the ground floor is divided into two 21-foot bays with a six-foot bay to the north occupied by the second floor stairway. The second floor consists of an office area and the two-story I00F Hall or ballroom. The third floor has several offices.

Many changes had been made to the Tempe Hardware Building through the years, but the original appearance of the building was restored in 1982. Is is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Go to the Tempe Historic Property Survey