Valley National Bank

Christown Branch, Phoenix

 

 

This former VNB Branch on 19th Avenue just north of Bethany Home, catter-corner from the former Christown Mall and in the shadow of the hospital, is not a large building so it doesn't qualify for spectacular modernist artifact, but on a Saturday morning the small lobby is buzzing with activity and people with funny hats who enjoy air conditioning and the mood is friendly, for a bank.

The Christown branch was indeed a former VNB and another Weaver and Drover building. Designer Frank Henry remembers it as a rather economical, small scale and simple building - too simple, tempting others to embellish it.

 

 

 

The original design did not include the relief sculptures. They came in a later renovation. The frieze around the top is, unfortunately, plastic and now broken in places. The roof shape is original, of course, and a nod to the rhythmic barrel-vault roof of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, although Henry points out that the Kimbell is "a little nicer".

(You know, looking more closely at these VNB branches, I'm beginning to see some direct quotes -- a quote from the Kimbell here, a quote from the Palm Springs City Hall elsewhere, a mini-Boston City Hall over in Glendale, and that repeated signature column at the Hoskins Ryan branch looks an awful lot like the cast-concrete columns at the Ennis House.)

The roof creates a nice effect inside but the lobby is surprisingly small.

 

 

 

Those relief sculptures are in three panels, and the panels are repeated front and back. Guesses to their significance will be happily received and tabulated.

Guessing has closed, however, about their source: they are the work of the great Phoenix sculptor Phillips Sanderson, who did a lot of work for Valley National Banks, and I would bet you a dollar he was influenced by the then-popular sculptor Constantino Nivola.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright 2006 Walt Lockley. All rights reserved.