Learn about Des Moines’ endangered buildings

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Summary

The Business Record is publishing a series of articles about the structures included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s recently released list of endangered buildings. Information about all of the buildings will be at businessrecord.com.

The Des Moines Heritage Trust recently released a list of seven “endangered buildings” in Des Moines. 

The list was released as a way of shining a spotlight on historically and culturally significant buildings at risk of being demolished.

“These are places that helped create our wonderful community and they are at risk of being demolished,” Tim Waddell, Des Moines Heritage Trust president, said in a prepared statement. “Without reinvestment, the unique stories of these seven places and the iconic neighborhood landmarks they represent will be lost like so many other local landmarks before them.”

The buildings include: 

• Highland Apartments, 3524 Sixth Ave., built in 1915.

• George the Chili King restaurant, 5722 Hickman Road, built in 1952.

• Washington School, 2 Hartford Ave., built in three phases beginning in 1898.

• Salvation Army Building, also known as the Nabisco building, 219 E. Court Ave., built in 1920.

• Butler Apartments or Gas Lamp building, 1501 Grand Ave., built in 1906.

• Jefferson Apartments, 1519 Grand Ave., built in 1915.

• Lustron Home, 4504 Fleur Drive, built in 1948.

Highland Apartments building at risk of being razed

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The Des Moines Heritage Trust has placed the Highland Apartments, located at Sixth and Euclid avenues, on its endangered building list. The building’s dilapidated condition makes it too expensive to renovate, officials with Invest DSM said. A new mixed-use development is proposed to be built on the site. File photo

Frank Wetherell was a prominent Iowa architect known for his design of public buildings including the Drake Municipal Observatory in Des Moines’ Waveland Park.

Wetherell, who was active between 1892 and 1931, also designed the Highland Apartments, located on the southwest corner of Sixth and Euclid avenues in the Highland Park neighborhood, north of downtown Des Moines.

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The image shows the interior condition of the Highland Apartments. File photo 

The 108-year-old, three-story brick structure is at risk of being razed. It is among the seven buildings included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s “most endangered” list that was recently released.

Over the years, the building’s first-floor commercial space has been occupied by a dentist’s office, Smith’s Highland Park Pharmacy, a laundromat and a record store. The second and third stories include apartment buildings.

The property is valued at $2.73 million; the building alone is valued at nearly $2.6 million, according to the Polk County assessor.

Invest DSM purchased the property in March and is proposing to raze the 108-year-old building and construct a new mixed-use structure.

The Des Moines City Council has postponed a discussion regarding the proposed demolition of Highland Apartments until June, the city announced.

RELATED ARTICLE: Proposal: Raze dilapidated building in Highland Park

Iconic diner included on list of endangered buildings in DM

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The structure that once was home to George the Chili King, a popular diner, has sat empty since 2019 and is now on the list of endangered Des Moines buildings. The diner at 5722 Hickman Road was built in 1952; the business originally began operating in 1920 in downtown Des Moines. Photo special to the Business Record

In 2014, Guy Fieri, host of the Food Network’s “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives,” visited the iconic George the Chili King diner on the west side of Des Moines.

Fieri sampled the diner’s chili dogs and tenderloin sandwiches.

“You guys are lucky,” Fieri told a customer. “Everybody in the country is envious of what you have here in Des Moines.”

George Karaidos Jr., the diner’s owner, died in October 2019. The restaurant closed a short time later.

The structure at 5722 Hickman Road is among the seven buildings included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s recently released list of “endangered buildings.”

Karaidos opened the restaurant in downtown Des Moines when he was 19 years old, according to a Des Moines Register article. He opened the Hickman Road location in 1952.

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A view of the east side of the building. Picnic tables still are set up along a covered patio on the south side of the building. Photo special to the Business Record

The 970-square-foot white building with a red roof “has not significantly changed since opening in July of 1952,” according to the Des Moines Heritage Trust. Counters and tables were available for customers inside the restaurant or they could eat in their vehicles.

“‘Car hops,’ sometimes on roller skates, took orders from cars that signaled they were ready to order by leaving their headlights on under the canopy and the food was delivered on a metal tray that hooked onto a partially rolled down window,” the Des Moines Heritage Trust wrote in its synopsis about the diner, which also has been featured in books by author Bill Bryson.

The building “is in pristine condition at this point,” said Tim Waddle, president of Des Moines Heritage Trust. “We think that it’s important to point out that when any building sits vacant for a long period of time, it is subjected to potential vandalism and arson. That’s concerning to us. …This is an iconic structure and a many people in the metro area have great memories of the [diner.]”

The property, valued at $104,000, is owned by Karaidos’ family, according to real estate records.

Former warehouse for cookie maker on list of endangered buildings

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The building at 211 E. Court Ave. in Des Moines was built in 1920 to house a warehouse for National Biscuit Co., or Nabisco. The structure, which has been unused since 1999, is among seven buildings on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s list of endangered buildings. Photo by Kathy A. Bolten

In 1920, the National Biscuit Co. built a warehouse and distribution office at 219 E. Court Ave.

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Numerous windows in the structure are either broken or boarded up. Photo by Kathy A. Bolten

The company, now known as Nabisco, spent $1 million on the 8,936-square-foot structure that included large windows to let light into the building. The feature was common in buildings constructed in the first part of the 1900s, according to information provided by the Des Moines Heritage Trust.

Today, several of the windows in the brick building are either broken or have plywood over them. The structure has sat empty since 1999 and is among seven buildings included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s endangered list. The Business Record is publishing information about the buildings.

National Biscuit Co. had a large presence in Des Moines for over 30 years. The company operated a production and distribution center out of a four-story building at 1001 Cherry St. from about 1906 to around 1940. The building, which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, was redeveloped into residential units in the mid-1990s.

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Numerous windows in the structure are either broken or boarded up. Photo by Kathy A. Bolten

The Salvation Army acquired the East Court Avenue property at an unknown date. The building was used as a warehouse and distribution center by the Salvation Army in the early 1960s after the organization built a new three-story facility to the west at 211 E. Court Ave., according to information from the trust.

The building at 219 E. Court Ave. was closed in 1999 after improper removal of asbestos. During the heavy rains of 2008, several feet of water accumulated in the structure. In 2021, the Salvation Army asked for permission to raze the building but the request was not approved, according to the trust.

Efforts to reach the Salvation Army for comment were unsuccessful.

Endangered building now considered ‘saved’

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The former Washington School at 2 Hartford Ave. was among the seven included on a list of endangered buildings. A day care operator recently signed a long-term lease for the building. Photo special to the Business Record

Last fall, when Des Moines Heritage Trust members were compiling a list of endangered buildings in Des Moines, the former Washington School building was vacant.

A short time before the list was released, space in the building at 2 Hartford Ave. was leased.

“We’re thrilled that it has been rented,” said Tim Waddell, president of the Des Moines Heritage Trust. “We’ll leave it on the endangered list … but we will put ‘saved’ over it. … It’s a great day when a building is saved.”

Lyman Enterprises LC, managed by Anthony Lyman, acquired the 1.2-acre parcel in 2004, real estate records show. Lyman said he’s made more than $1 million in improvements to the structure, including replacing the roof. Improvements have also been made to the foundation.
The property is valued at $302,000, records show.

Lyman said a longtime tenant vacated the building last fall and the building was empty until a new tenant was found earlier this year. The new tenant, who operates a day care, signed a five-year lease, he said.

“We’ve had the fire department and building department and people from the state go through to inspect the building,” Lyman said. “They said it was good to go for a day care.”

An elementary school has occupied the site since the 1870s, according to information compiled by Des Moines Heritage Trust. The first section that was built was a four-room brick school that served south Des Moines and what was known as Sevastapol. Two more additions were added over the years.

In February 1941, a fire severely damaged the original section of the building, which was torn down. The newer additions were rebuilt as a gymnasium, according to the trust. A separate kindergarten building was erected in 1898 and a 1909 remodeling added several rooms, causing the front of the building to move from Hillside Avenue to Hartford Avenue.

Enrollment in the school peaked at 550 students. However, the opening of McKinley Elementary School in 1904 and St. Anthony’s Catholic School in 1912 took students away from Washington School, which closed after the 1982-83 school year.

A proposal to put a community center in the building failed to materialize, as did converting it to apartments.

For most of the time Lyman has owned the 1.2-acre parcel, a day care has been in the building, Lyman said. “The building was vacant for maybe three months.”

Jefferson Apartments face uncertain future

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The Jefferson Apartments at 1519 Grand Ave. are among the seven buildings included on Des Moines Heritage Trust’s list of endangered buildings. The building has been unused since 2021. Photo by Kathy A. Bolten

A full-page “publicity advertisement” touting the newly opened Jefferson Apartments was published in the Des Moines Evening Tribune on July 21, 1915.

Anyone “fortunate enough to secure one of these apartments will be quite convinced that they have been designed by architects in a high state of civilization,” read the advertisement, designed to look like a news article.

The apartment units all included Murphy beds, a bed that has hinges on one end so it can be vertically stored against a wall. The units also included “extension kitchen tables, broom cupboards, dish cupboards, linen lockers – and room!” the advertisement read. “These apartments have attained such a high condition of built-in conveniences that they might be called ‘built-in bungalows.’”

The four-story apartment building at 1519 Grand Ave. is among the seven structures included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s list of endangered buildings. The property was purchased in 2014 by an entity managed by the Krause Group, which built its headquarters at 1459 Grand Ave. a few years later.

In 2019, Krause Group announced plans to build a multiuse sports stadium on land south of Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway. The Pro Iowa Stadium and Global Plaza are now planned at 200 S.W. 16th St. Development plans expanded to an area north of the company’s headquarters which included properties along Grand Avenue, west of the Krause Gateway Center.

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Several windows in the building are boarded up. Photo by Kathy A. Bolten

In 2021, the company notified residents of the Jefferson Apartments that the building was being emptied so that it could be renovated, according to a Des Moines Register article. The structure has been unused since then.

A spokesperson for Krause Group wrote in an email that conversations are underway about the Jefferson Apartment but that “no decisions have been made at this point regarding demo and new construction vs. remodels.”

The Des Moines architect firm Proudfoot & Bird, which designed several buildings in the early 1900s including the Hotel Fort Des Moines, designed the Jefferson Apartments. The building was constructed by the J.C. Mardis Co., a prominent local firm at the time that had built the Masonic Temple and Successful Farming building, according to the advertisement.

The more than 300,000 bricks used to build the Jefferson Apartments were furnished by Flint Brick Co., whose factory was along the Des Moines River near the Highland Park neighborhood, the advertisement said.

In 1938, the Bankers Life Co., which later became Principal Financial Group, remodeled the building, making 52 large apartments into 72 smaller units, according to information from the Des Moines Heritage Trust. Real estate records show that the property changed hands several times before it was acquired by Edward Nahas in 1995. The Nahas family sold the property to Krause Group in 2014.

The property is currently valued at $3.2 million.

Butler Building, current home of Gas Lamp, on endangered building list

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Owners of the Gas Lamp, 1501 Grand Ave., plan on closing the music venue and bar in July. The Gas Lamp is located in the Butler Building, one of seven properties included on a list of endangered buildings. Photo by Kathy A. Bolten

For at least 50 years, street-level commercial space in the Butler Building has been occupied by music venues including Blues on Grand, Vicky’s Pour House and, most recently, the Gas Lamp.
Earlier this year, owners of the Gas Lamp announced on social media that they planned to close the venue in July.

The closure, coupled with uncertainty about plans that the property’s current owner has for the building, has placed it on the Des Moines Heritage Group’s list of endangered buildings.

Krause Group, through one of its entities, purchased the property at 1501 Grand Ave. in early 2015, real estate records show. The Butler Building is directly west of the Krause Gateway Center at 1459 Grand Ave. In 2021, Krause Group announced plans to redevelop the area around its headquarters and to the south, where the 6,300-seat Pro Iowa Stadium and Global Plaza are planned.

Krause Group, through its development arm Krause+, partnered with the city of Des Moines in applying for funding through the Iowa Reinvestment Act. The application for the funds included descriptions of redevelopment plans for properties on the western portion of downtown Des Moines, including the Butler Building.

“Two older structures with distinct character, the former Crescent Chevrolet building and the Butler Building, provide opportunities for adaptive reuse projects,” Krause Group wrote in its application. The Crescent building has been renovated and is now home to Big Grove Brewery & Taproom, HomeGrown and the marketing firm Trilix.

In the application, Krause Group wrote that the Butler Building would remain a mixed-use retail structure with 4,200 square feet available on the first level. The remaining floors would include 23 residential units. At the time of the application, reinvestment in the retail portion of the building was estimated at $1.5 million. Upgrades to the residential units were estimated at about $4 million.

Planning and construction were expected to occur between 2027 and 2028 with completion in 2029, according to information in the application.

A spokesperson for Krause Group wrote in an email that plans for the Butler Building are still being discussed.

The four-story brick building was constructed around 1892, according to real estate records. Between 1991 and 2015, it had 12 different owners, records show.

The architectural style of the building is Renaissance/Georgian and is a “good example of the early 20th century designed buildings which combined commercial and residential designs,” according to Des Moines Heritage Trust. The original commercial tenant of the building was HS Chase Grocery Store and Meat Market.

The property is valued at just over $1 million.

Lustron home among structures on endangered building list

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A prefabricated house at 4504 Fleur Drive is included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s endangered buildings list. The house was built post-World War II to provide housing for soldiers and others returning to the U.S. after the war. Photo special to the Business Record

When soldiers returned to the United State after World War II, there was a desperate need for housing.

To accommodate the demand, Chicago industrialist and inventor Carl Strandlund suggested bungalow-sized houses be built with prefabricated enameled steel. Everything in the houses — roofs, walls, cabinets — was made from steel, according to a 2019 column by Dave Elbert in the Business Record. The houses were delivered by truck “to a concrete slab, where 3,3000 separate pieces were assembled in two days.”

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How the house looked in 1993. Photo special to the Business Record

At the time, the houses sold for between $8,500 and $9,500.

Twenty-three of the houses, designed by the Chicago-based Lustron Corp., were built in Polk County. Fifteen of the houses were still occupied in 2019, Elbert wrote.

Now one of the houses is included on the Des Moines Heritage Trust’s list of seven endangered buildings.

The 982-square-foot Lustron House at 4504 Fleur Drive was built in the late 1940s and is listed in “very poor” condition by the Polk County assessor. It was built when “Fleur Drive was predominately residential and on the edge of town,” according to the trust. The house was used primarily as a residence until 1996 and then became home to a psychic reader and photographer. Windows in the house are now boarded closed.

The first Lustron home assembled in Des Moines was at 4343 Chamberlain Drive, near Roosevelt High School. It was the first Lustron House in Iowa and the fifth in the nation, according to the trust.

Dozens of the houses remain intact across the country, and several have been added to the National Register of Historic Places.

The company that made the houses went bankrupt in 1950.

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Kathy A. Bolten

Kathy A. Bolten is a senior staff writer at Business Record. She covers real estate and development, workforce development, education, banking and finance, and housing.

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