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![[photo]](buildings/uni1_UIW%20Power%20House%201.jpg)
The Union Iron Works Powerhouse,
on the east shore of Alameda
Photo courtesy of the
National Trust for Historic Preservation |
The history of the Union Iron Works Powerhouse is inseparable from the
shipyard it was once part of. Established in the early 1900s by the United
Engineering Company, the yard was purchased by Union Iron Works (later
called Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation) in 1916 and came to be known
as the Alameda Works. The building is one of many designed for the Pacific
Gas and Electric Company (PG & E) in northern California between 1905
and the 1920s. The site was expanded from seven to 75 acres with facilities
for constructing up to six major vessels simultaneously, making it one
of the largest and best equipped yards in the country. After 1923, the
Alameda Works ceased making ships but continued its dry docking and ship
repairing operations.
At the beginning of World War II, the Alameda Works was re-established
as the Bethlehem Alameda Shipyard, and modernized and expanded to include
new shipways and on-site worker housing. During the war, the yard repaired
more than 1,000 vessels and produced P-2 troop transport ships, and
it continued to produce structural steel. Shipbuilding came to an end
in the early 1950s and the yard was closed in 1956.
Union Iron Works Powerhouse, the
last building to remain from the once-sprawling Alameda Works
shipyard
Photo courtesy of the
National Trust for Historic Preservation
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Designed by San Francisco architect Frederick H. Meyer, the Union Iron
Works Powerhouse stands as the last remnant of the Alameda Works Shipyard.
Meyer was one of San Francisco's leading architects between 1905-1955
and is best known for his role in the development of the San Francisco
Civic Center, for his many downtown San Francisco office buildings and
for his careful and imaginative use of orthodox ornamental detail. The
Union Iron Works Powerhouse is a one-story rectangular industrial building,
25 feet high, 53 feet wide and 110 feet long, which rests on a concrete
base. Borrowing imagery from classical antiquity and the Renaissance,
the powerhouse is an excellent example of a building type--the "beautiful"
power house--for which the Bay Area was nationally known. It contained
several large generators and was constructed specifically to meet the
massive electricity requirements of the yards. Today, the little building
that once powered an entire shipyard has been converted into private office
space.
The Union Iron Works Powerhouse is located at 2308 Webster St.
in Alameda, California. Take the Posey Tube south from Oakland to the
island of Alameda, where the Posey Tube becomes Webster St . The Union
Iron Works Powerhouse is within 1,000 feet of entering the island. Now
a private office space, it is closed to the public.
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