Designed by architect David L. Williams,[3] the 119-room hotel opened at the intersection of Southwest Sixth Avenue and Main Street in downtown Portland in 1912. Hubert Humphrey and Robert Kennedy are among notable guests.[4] The hotel remained family owned until 1977.[5] Governor Robert W. Straub attended a "wake" for the building, before it was demolished in 1977 or 1978,[6] and later replaced by the Orbanco Building (now known as the Congress Center).[7][8]
The Congress Hotel hosted the National Chrysanthemum Society's convention in 1958.[9] In 2005, writers for Willamette Week described how the hotel was used by local government officials during the 1970s. Caryn B. Brooks and Steve Forrester wrote, "In those days, public council sessions were strictly pro forma: The real business of the council was done in private, over lunch at the Congress Hotel."[10]
Johann H. Tuerck completed some of the hotel's wrought iron work.[11]Terracotta arches from the building were used to create an ornate gazebo structure that was later used as an entrance to the restaurant The Melting Pot.[12] The structure has been placed on the city's Historic Resource Inventory.[13][14]
^"Sunrise 60: Portland history in plain sight". KGW. 2019-10-01. Archived from the original on 2023-09-22. Retrieved 2024-03-29. In the middle of downtown Portland, stands a beautiful and intricately carved gazebo at the corner of Southwest 6th Avenue and Main Street. It's a piece of the now-demolished Congress Hotel, built in 1912.