NW Portland’s lavish 1893 Queen Anne house is for sale at $1,695,000. See inside

The 1893 Nathan Loeb House at 726 N.W. 22nd Ave. in Northwest Portland is for sale.

The dining room has wainscot and tall windows and ceilings.

the kitchen was updated by the Neil Kelly Company, with quartz surfaces, a Wolf 6-six-burner gas range and Sub-Zero refrigerator.

The 20-foot-long living room benefits from a high ceiling and large windows.

A foursquare floor plan has larger rooms than Queen Anne-style homes of the era.

The 18-foot-long family room is separated from the living room by an elaborate arched frame featuring carved and spindled woodwork.

The four-level house with 5,712 square feet of living space has seven bedrooms and five bathrooms.

The four-level house with 5,712 square feet of living space has seven bedrooms and five bathrooms updated with Victorian-era fixtures.

Original stained glass windows was crafted by Povey Brothers Art Glass Works, Oregon’s first decorative window company known as the Tiffany of the Northwest.

The Nathan Loeb House was built in 1893 in the Queen Anne style. The house, at 726 N.W. 22nd Ave., was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

People pass by a handsome Victorian-era house in Portland’s Nob Hill neighborhood, and some stop to snap a photo. Classic Queen Anne architectural adornments draw attention, from the custom spindles on the front railings to the decorative siding above the bay windows.

Few passersby know the 1893 Nathan Loeb House, at 726 N.W. 22nd Ave., is one of the oldest surviving residences in Portland. The American foursquare floor plan with large rooms on a 5,227-square-foot lot is for sale at $1,695,000.

“This is a San Francisco-type home in Portland for a fraction of the price,” said listing brokers Ann Thompson and Muffie Scanlan of Windermere Realty Trust.

Thompson said people tell her the property is beautiful. “It’s not just an old house, it’s not just a foursquare, it’s ‘that incredible Victorian on Northwest 22nd’,” she said.

The well-kept house with high ceilings and tall windows under pitched roofs is attractive to “anyone with an appreciation of Victorian architecture, history and stories that go along with” it, Scanlan told The Oregonian/OregonLive.

A double front door opens to an entry hall that leads to the 20-foot-long living room and adjoining 18-foot-long family room, separated by an elaborate arched frame featuring carved and spindled woodwork.

The main level also has a formal dining room and an enlarged kitchen, updated by the Neil Kelly Company, with quartz surfaces, a Wolf 6-six-burner gas range and Sub-Zero refrigerator. Like the kitchen, the butler’s pantry has Victorian-era details such as a backsplash of tinplate tiles pressed with a pattern that was popular in the late 1800s.

Original stained glass windows crafted by Povey Brothers Art Glass Works, Oregon’s first decorative window company known as the Tiffany of the Northwest, and contemporary leaded-glass, some by David Schlicker Stained Glass, create an “ever-changing play of color,” said Thompson. “The tall, graceful windows let in so much light, yet the public rooms have a cozy feel.”

Hand-carved, unpainted built-in shelves and mantels over the two fireplace are some of the preserved features that were “meticulously cared for” in the house that has also been “artfully updated,” said the brokers. The three-dimensional floral tilework around the fireplace in the living room is also original.

The four-level house with 5,712 square feet of living space has seven bedrooms and five bathrooms. A finished basement includes private living quarters, a craft room, wine cellar and storage.

The Nathan Loeb House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as among one of the grandest and most ornate of the late Victorian-era residences that have survived in Portland. Historians also saw the Nathan Loeb House as “a model of high-quality restoration and adaptive use rehabilitation,” and cite the location significant since the area has the city’s largest collection of late 19th and early 20th century houses.

The landmark structure was built by Rudolph Becker who leased it to Nathan Loeb, the owner of general stores in Portland and Astoria. Loeb’s grandsons Eugene Oppenheimer, a Multnomah County Circuit Court judge and president of the Oregon State Bar, and Dr. Russell H. Kaufman, former president of the Oregon Medical Association, were born in the house.

The Loeb residence and many other historic homes were converted to rooming houses during World War II and later to offices, say historians. Renewed interest in Victorian-era architecture decades ago and the area’s proximity to the urban center resulted in extensive rehabilitation of the dwellings.

“The rare off-street parking and flexible floor plan could accommodate multi-generational living,” said Scanlan. ”It was a two-unit home at one time, and the plumbing for an additional kitchen is hidden behind a wall on the second floor, and washer-dryer hookups on the third floor.”

There is a large deck with a fire pit as well as a brick-walled secret grotto with a stone waterfall for dining al fresco and outdoor entertaining. Mechanical upgrades include the addition of dual heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems and a third-floor fire sprinkler system. Electrical updates include 220-volt outlets in the lower-level wood shop and attached two-car garage to charge electric cars.

The neighborhood in the Alphabet District is well known for its restaurants and shops, and its closeness to Forest Park, Washington Park and the Willamette River Greenway and Water Trail.

Oregon real estate

— Janet Eastman | 503-294-4072

jeastman@oregonian.com | @janeteastman

If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

X

Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information

If you opt out, we won’t sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously.