
The Bostwick building, at the corner of Ocean and Bay, is one of downtown Jacksonville, Florida’s most visible historic buildings. It was constructed in 1902, one of the first permitted structures built after the Great Fire. Sporting typical “big bank” architecture, it hosted a succession of failed banks through the boom and bust cycles of the early 20th century. A skillful renovation in 1919 doubled its size, but the banking years were already over for the building when the Great Depression struck in 1929.
It was converted to office usage in the 1930s, housing the architectural business of definitive Jacksonville architect Henry Klutho from 1944 to 1960. The building declined alongside other iconic downtown Jacksonville, Florida structures during suburbanization and urban renewal projects in the following decades.
In the 1990s, local artist Jim Draper decorated the windows with his famous jaguar mural. Eventually, years of water intrusion damaged the building so severely that many feared it could not be saved.
In 2012 the city declared the building a historic landmark and foreclosed on the owner, who had filed a demolition permit application in lieu of paying over $70,000 in fines that had accrued as a result of code violations. Local restaurateur Jacques Klempf bought the building at auction with the idea of renovating it for use as an upscale chophouse.
The pain-staking, brick-by-brick renovation work has presented many challenges. A sinking foundation in one corner and a leaking roof in another threatened to collapse the walls, built of brick and mortar before the development of steel-reinforced concrete. Just holding the building up would be a victory.

In perhaps the safest bank vault in town, a steel-enclosed room weighing some 60,000 lbs, the renovation team discovered the most exciting salvage score in years. Thousands of items were preserved, including jewelry and valuables, blueprints and a drafting table that might have belonged to Klutho, and stacks of thousands of paper records that will keep local historians busy for a while.

The entire collection has been donated to the Museum of Science and History, where staff estimates it will takes several years of examination to even be sure of what they have before exhibiting the material for the general public. Until then, historians will be able to access the archive at MOSH’s third-floor collections room.
Usable building material isn’t the only thing worth keeping out of the landfill. Preserving Jacksonville’s cultural heritage is part of Eco Relics’ mission. Our deconstruction team regularly salvages culturally significant items that were bound for the landfill. Eco Relics makes those items available to you at our historic warehouse just outside downtown Jacksonville. Stop by and browse the broad selection of local antiques and collectibles.
Do you know if any of the jewelry will be sold or auctioned. I am interested if they are.
I am looking for old red clay brick for a couple of projects. Would you happen to have any for sale ? Thank you
[…] owner took special case to honor the old building and its history. They even commissioned the artist who painted the Jaguar on the building to paint magnificent […]