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DAA JDESIGN <br />ARCH ITECTURE+INTER IORS <br />3.0 STRUCTURE CONDITION ASSESSMENT <br />3.1 SITE <br />ASSOCIATED LANDSCAPE FEATURES <br />Description: <br />700 Pine is set on a corner lot in downtown Louisville that is approximately 50 feet wide by 100 feet deep, <br />running lengthwise in the north -south direction and totaling approximately 5,000 sf. The property is bordered on <br />00.�the north by Pine Street, on the west by Jefferson Avenue, on the south by an alley, and on the east by a <br />residential property. The property is enclosed along the alley by a wood and metal fence, partially along the <br />— east property line by a plastic fence, and there are smaller metal fences enclosing a rear yard between the <br />house and a garage. <br />Approximately 35% of the lot is covered by the footprints of the main house and the garage. The main house <br />sits about 25 feet from Pine Street and 18 feet from Jefferson Avenue. The garage sits near the southwest <br />corner of the property and abuts the alley. There is a small concrete driveway between Jefferson Avenue and <br />the garage. <br />Most of the site is grass, with a large shrub at the southwest corner of the house, shrubs on the east and west <br />sides of the covered front porch, a garden in the southeast corner of the site, and small shrubs around the north <br />and east of the garage. There are mature trees in the alley but none that are located on the site. <br />Finally, in the southeast corner of the lot there are three small structures built of concrete, brick, and CMU <br />blocks with metal caps. These appear to be historic trash incinerators that are no longer used. <br />Southwest corner of the house with large shrub. <br />Condition Evaluation <br />Possible historic trash <br />incinerators. <br />Overall, the landscape features are in good condition. The trash incinerators may be historic, though further <br />analysis by an historian is necessary. <br />Recommendations: <br />The Louisville Historical Museum should further evaluate the three concrete, brick, and CMU structures located <br />in the southeast corner of the property to determine their potential historic value to the site and to Louisville as a <br />whole. <br />700 PINE PAGE - 9 <br />