Architect: James C. Bucklin

4 properties

1801 to 1890 — Rehoboth born, Bucklin was a very prominent designer in Providence from the 1840s to the 1870s. He designed at least half a dozen Westminster Street office buildings, as well as several more downtown. Tallman & Bucklin had charge of the city’s first major period of school-building, designing 12 buildings citywide. Wikipedia.

  • About half of the “Mile of History,” documenting the western side of Benefit Street as it looked in 2004

    College Hill | Built: 1763–1869

  • One of the first artist-led redevelopment projects post-Eagle Square, these 21 units have remained in artist’s hands, some with afforability restrictions

    Olneyville/Valley | Built: 1866

  • A sliver of an 1829 structure survives under this turn-of-the-20th-century vaudeville theatre turned movie house turned commercial storefronts

    Downtown Providence | Built: 1829, 1902, 1950s

  • This over 190 year old structure survived 170 years as an indoor mall but now is a collection of retail and micro-loft styles residential condos

    Downtown Providence | Built: 1828