UCR’s Culver Center of the Arts opens

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Oct. 2010
UCR Culver Center of the Arts


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Architectural rendering
UCR

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2008
Project info

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1906
Rouse’s / Chapman Building***
(close-up view of awning)

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1953
Rouse’s Dept. Store
RCC yearbook

This past week marked the opening of UC Riverside’s Barbara & Art Culver Center of the Arts, adding another major arts facility to downtown.
Located adjacent to the existing UCR/CMP (California Museum of Photography), the Culver Center expands UCR’s ARTSblock presence on the main street pedestrian mall. In addition to hosting its own arts programs, including dance, music and film, the three-level Culver Center is also the new home for the university’s Sweeney Art Galley. It also houses — via seismically safe storage cases — the CMP’s world-renown Keystone-Mast collection of stereoscopic glass negatives.
The center resides within the former Rouse’s department store*, which dates to 1895 as the Chapman Building, one of the oldest on the downtown mall. The current configuration actually takes in two sections, 3834 and 3850 Main Street. According to city permits, the latter (and smaller portion) was built in 1917.
Various renovations and refurbishments have been made to the building over the years, including some exterior upgrades in the early- to mid-1950s (metal canopy and touches of stonework). But the most extensive makeover came around 1925 (though some reports indicate 1924 or 1927), when Rouse’s expanded onto the second floor. Noted architect G. Stanley Wilson added a grand staircase inside and re-faced the exterior facade with Spanish-influenced tiles, bas-relief and iron work, much of which remains today.
Known for high-end clothing, the original Rouse’s lasted until 1957 before being leased out (in name) to other interests. By 1964, just two years before the opening of the pedestrian mall, the store had closed. With a few exceptions, including Casual Gourmet Restaurant, Spanky’s Cafe and The Tamale Factory, the building has remained mostly vacant since.
Old images highlight the building’s central atrium, which has been restored**. The new center also has a spot for a yet-to-be filled indoor-outdoor cafe, which would be a nice addition to this portion of the pedestrian mall.
The Culver Center follows the recent opening of the Fox Performing Arts Center and adds to the city’s growing collection of arts-related facilities and institutions, including among others, the California-Riverside Ballet of Arts, Riverside Art Museum, Riverside Metropolitan Museum, Mission Inn Museum, Riverside Community Arts Association, Performance Riverside, Division Nine Gallery and The People’s Gallery.
Another planned downtown arts facility — Riverside Community College’s “Henry W. and Alice Edna Coil School for the Arts” — is tentatively scheduled for a 2014 opening.

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2004
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2006
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2006
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2006


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2008
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2008
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2009


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2009
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2010
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2010



Related


* 1953 RCC yearbook
** Courtesy of UCR
*** 1906 RFD souvenir booklet
Sources: The Press-Enterprise, UCR, City of Riverside

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