The nine attenuated arches along S. Oregon Street and the monumental front entrance arch of this white terra-cotta-clad bank have no supporting pilasters or imposts, imbuing the two-story building with bold monumentality. Above the arcade, an emphatic cornice over modillions and a balustrade complete Henry Trost’s personal interpretation of a Roman bath. Percy McGhee extended the bank along S. Oregon Street.
On the next block at 215 E. San Antonio, the W. S. Hills Building (1926, Trost and Trost) is a two-story, five-bay, terra-cotta store, combining a classical order of tall, paneled pilasters and second-floor windows in the Chicago format. The building extends through the narrow block with a matching facade on Texas Avenue.