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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2013 01 14
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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2013 01 14
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HPCPKT 2013 01 14
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Resource Number: 5BL 11319 <br />Temporary Resource Number: 157508414007 <br />19. Primary external roof material: Asphalt <br />20. Special features: Chimney, porch, fence, garage <br />21. General architectural description: 713 Spruce is a wood framed, one-story residence, generally rectangular in <br />plan, with its primary façade facing south to Spruce Street. The house appears to have originally had a cross- <br />gable roof. Hip-roofed additions have extended the house to the east and north. Roofing consists of tan asphalt <br />shingles and eaves are boxed. There is a painted concrete masonry exterior chimney on the east side. Siding <br />is white-painted horizontal wood lap siding with 4" wood corner trim. On the west and south sides, there is a <br />wainscot of white-painted plywood panel siding below the lap siding. The foundation is concrete and low in <br />height. Windows are mostly simple wood sash single hung with simple wood trim and non-historic aluminum <br />storm/screen sash. The front façade has a large non-historic "picture" fixed window and a large pair of <br />aluminum sliders. The entrance is enclosed with sliding glass patio doors at a wood stoop with three wood <br />stairs and a wooden railing. <br />22. Architectural style/building type: No style <br />23. Landscaping or special setting features: Jefferson Place Subdivision is a historic residential neighborhood <br />adjacent to downtown Louisville. The subdivision is laid out on a standard urban grid of narrow, deep lots with <br />rear alleys. Houses are built to a fairly consistent setback line along the streets with small front lawns, deep <br />rear yards and mature landscaping. Small, carefully maintained single-family residences predominate. Most of <br />the houses are wood framed, one or one and one-half stories in height, featuring white or light-colored <br />horizontal wood or steel siding, gabled or hipped asphalt shingled roofs and front porches. While many of the <br />houses have been modified over the years, most of the historic character-defining features have been <br />preserved. 713 Spruce Street is on a large, 3-lot parcel. The house has been modified at least three times <br />since 1948 and has a more contemporary appearance than the other houses in Jefferson Place. It is also <br />somewhat unusual as it is one of few residences on Spruce Street, which had mostly commercial properties in <br />Jefferson Place. The house is set close to Spruce Street with a shallow front yard that is open to the street. <br />The front yard has grass, two large trees, and a continuous concrete curb/retaining wall along the north edge of <br />the City sidewalk. A concrete sidewalk and two concrete steps lead to the front entrance from the City walk. <br />Very close to the east side of the house there is an asphalt alley. Shrubs and a chain link fence separate the <br />house from the alley. The western side yard is 22 feet wide and unfenced, with a grass lawn, a large tree, and <br />pavers along the west edge of the house. The back yard is enclosed with wood fencing on the west side and <br />chain link on the east. There is a concrete patio along the north side of the house, the western portion of which <br />is covered with a shed roof on wood posts. The eastern half of the yard is an asphalt driveway for the garage. <br />The western half is a grass lawn with a diagonal concrete walk. Along the north side of this property is a very <br />narrow alley, one of a few east-west alleys in Jefferson Place. These were vacated in the 1970s and the <br />property deeded to the adjacent owners, including this one. Most of them still exist and are used for private <br />vehicle parking. <br />24. Associated buildings, features, or objects: There is a large non-historic 3-car garage and workshop at the <br />northeast corner of the site. This appears to have been built in two separate sections at different times. The <br />eastern bay is set further north than the western bay and the gable roofs are perpendicular. The exterior siding <br />is horizontal masonite siding and the roofing is tan asphalt shingles. The eastern bay has a metal panel <br />overhead door opening south to an asphalt drive within the fenced back yard. The western bay has 2 wood <br />panel overhead doors with glass lights, both of which open south to the back yard. <br />IV.AH <br />RCHITECTURAL ISTORY <br />25. Date of Construction: Estimate: 1890s Actual: <br /> Source of information: Boulder County Deed of Trust <br />26. Architect: Unknown <br /> Source of information: NA <br />27. Builder/Contractor: Unknown, but possibly first owner Charles Taylor, who was a carpenter <br /> Source of information: 1900 census and 1904 Louisville directory identify Charles Taylor as a carpenter <br />2 <br />
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