HomeMy WebLinkAboutItem 5A - 2230 20th St Memo 2.3.2021
MEMORANDUM TO THE LANDMARKS BOARD
February 3, 2021
STAFF
Jacob Lindsey, Planning & Development Services Director
Charles Ferro, Interim Comprehensive Planning Manager
Lucas Markley, Assistant City Attorney
James Hewat, Senior Historic Preservation Planner
Marcy Cameron Gerwing, Historic Preservation Planner II
Clare Brandt, Administrative Specialist II
LANDMARK DESIGNATION REQUEST
Public hearing and consideration of the proposed designation of the property at 2230 20th St. as
an individual historic landmark, pursuant to Section 9-11-5 of the Boulder Revised Code 1981,
and under the procedures prescribed by chapter 1-3, "Quasi-Judicial Hearings," B.R.C. 1981
(HIS2020-00222).
Address: 2230 20th St.
Owner: Laurel Brozovich and Mark Seferian
Case Number: HIS2020-00222
Case Type: Landmark Designation
Code Section: 9-11-5, B.R.C., 1981
SITE INFORMATION
Date of Construction: 1924
Zoning: RL-1 (Residential Low – 1)
Lot Size: 3,640 sq. ft. (Boulder County)
Legal Description: WALSH SUB – BO
STAFF RECOMMENDATION
Staff recommends the Landmarks Board forward the application to the City Council with a
recommendation to designate the property as an individual landmark to be known as the
Barnes–Gillard House.
RECOMMENDED MOTION
I move that the Landmarks Board recommend that the City Council designate the property at
2230 20th St. as a local historic landmark, to be known as the Barnes-Gillard House, finding that
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 1 of 19
it meets the standards for individual landmark designation in Sections 9-11-1 and 9-11-2, B.R.C.
1981, and adopt the staff memorandum dated Feb. 3, 2021, as the findings of the board.
FINDINGS
The Landmarks Board finds, based upon the application and evidence presented, that the
proposed designation application is consistent with the purposes and standards of the Historic
Preservation Ordinance, in that:
1.The designation of the property will protect, enhance and perpetuate a property and
buildings reminiscent of a past era and important in local and state history and
preserves a significant example of architecture from the past.
2.The designation will maintain an appropriate setting and environment and will enhance
property values, stabilize the neighborhood, promote tourist trade and interest and
foster knowledge of the city’s living heritage.
3.The designation draws a reasonable balance between private property rights and the
public interest in preserving the city’s cultural, historic and architectural heritage by
ensuring that demolition of buildings important to that heritage will be carefully
weighed with other alternatives.
4.The property proposed for designation has historic, architectural and aesthetic value.
SUMMARY
•On July 29, 2020, the property owner submitted a landmark designation application for the
property at 2230 20th St.
•Consistent with policy 2.27 Preservation of Historic & Cultural Resources of the Boulder
Valley Comprehensive Plan, the buildings were identified as potentially eligible during the
discretionary review process and a designation application was submitted as a condition of a
Minor Amendment to the Planned Unit Development (PUD).
•In August, the Landmarks Design Review Committee (LDRC) approved a landmark alteration
certificate for the rehabilitation and construction of an addition to the house
(HIS2020-00223).
•Pursuant to Section 9-11-5(C) of the Boulder Revised Code, the Landmarks Board must hold a
public hearing between 60 and 120 days unless agreed upon by the owner and the City. To
ensure the applicant’s proposal could be approved through the Minor Amendment, the
application was held by agreement until the Minor Amendment application was approved.
•The criteria for the board’s review are found in Sections 9-11-1, Purpose and Legislative
Intent, and 9-11-2, City Council May Designate Landmarks and Historic Districts, B.R.C. 1981.
•Staff recommends that the Landmarks Board forward the application to the City Council with
the recommendation to designate the property, to be known as the Barnes-Gillard House.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 2 of 19
PROPERTY DESCRIPTION
The property at 2230 20th St. is located on the east side of 20th Street, between Pine Street and
Mapleton Avenue in the identified potential Whittier Historic District. The lot is approximately
3,640 sq. ft. in size, having been subdivided as part of a Planned Unit Development (PUD) in
1984. An alley is located along the south edge of the lot.
Figure 1. Location map, 2230 20th St.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 3 of 19
Figure 2. West elevation, 2230 20th St., 2020.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Figure 3. West elevation (façade), 2230 20th St., 2020.
Constructed in 1924, the one-story masonry building has a double front gable with an off-
centered porch supported by short tapered-wood piers and brick pillars. The gable ends of the
house are stuccoed and the upper gable has small Craftsman-style window with three lights and
a tapered surround. The façade has a centrally located door flanked by double-hung windows
with brick sills.
Figure 4. South elevation (facing alley), 2230 20th St., 2020.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 4 of 19
Two smaller, three-pane windows are located on the south side of the building, along with a
small double-hung window with a brick sill. The southeast corner of the house is of frame
construction that appears to be original to the house. The horizontal windows on the south and
east elevations appear to have been replaced, along with a non-historic door on the south
elevation. Solar panels are located on the south slope of the roof.
Figure 5. North elevation, 2230 20th St., 2020.
Two double-hung windows are located on the north elevation. A non-historic pergola extends
into the side yard, and is proposed to be removed.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 5 of 19
Figure 5. 2230 20th St., Tax Assessor Card Photograph, c.1929.
ALTERATIONS
The house remains largely intact to its original construction, with few exterior changes to its
mass or materiality. In 2020, LDRC approved the rehabilitation and construction of an addition
(HIS2020-00223) on the north elevation. See Figure 7.
Figure 7. 2230 20th St., Approved LAC drawings showing addition, 2020.
AREA HISTORY
The following is an excerpt from the 1987 Survey Report for the Whittier neighborhood.1
The origins of the Whittier neighborhood of Boulder can be traced to the founding of the
city. The Boulder City Town Company was organized in 1859 by a group of pioneers led by
Thomas A. Aikins. The sixty men who created the company divided land along Boulder Creek
into 4,044 lots, each 50 feet wide and 140 feet deep. Streets were 80 feet wide and alleys 20
feet wide. Included in the original city blocks were Hill (now Mapleton), Pine, and Spruce
Streets.
1 Whittier Neighborhood. Christine Whitacre and R. Laurie Simmons, Surveyors. City of Boulder, 1987.
https://www-static.bouldercolorado.gov/docs/Whittier,_1989-1-
201509031343.pdf?_ga=2.143136626.633674392.1610317280-1638280431.1606173491
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 6 of 19
Development within the city limits proceeded slowly due to the greater attraction of the
mining camps and the relatively high price of city lots. The price for an individual lot was set
at $1,000 by the town company. This steep sum was intended to limit and control
immigration to the town. In 1864, the company turned over its remaining unsold lots to
Boulder County (created in 1861), with the provision that any profits from the lands be
spent on the construction of a county courthouse in the public square bordered by Pearl and
Spruce, 13th and 14th Streets.
Portions of the neighborhood between 12th and 13th Street were the most heavily
developed by that date, with scattered development up to 17th Street. The Methodist
Church at 14th and Spruce and the Congregational Church at 11th and Pine were
landmarks. A map of Boulder in 1880- 1881, drawn by Samuel Freeze, indicates that many
of the lots in the Whittier neighborhood had been taken up by prominent early settlers,
including Andrew J. Macky, James P. Maxwell, Sidney A. Giffin, Eugene Austin, Chauncey
Stokes, Charles Buckingham, James M. North, Clinton M. Tyler and George Fonda.
The erection of the Pine Street School in 1882 gave the neighborhood a vital focus. The
school was built in response to a critical shortage of classrooms which developed in 1881. In
May 1881, James North, a resident of the neighborhood and secretary of the school board,
urged the town to construct a new school as soon as possible. In 1882 a bond election
passed and the Pine Street site was purchased.
Samuel Gladden's Directory of Boulder for 1883 lists many of the city's prominent citizens as
residing in the neighborhood. Handsome, stylistically defined brick houses were constructed
along Pine Street by these early Boulder residents. John Pughe, a wealthy miner, built
several residential units in the area. Further east were the less substantial and smaller
frame houses of the working class and minority groups. A large group of Swedish
immigrants entered the city around 1900 and many built homes along Bluff and Mapleton.
PROPERTY HISTORY
The property at 2230 20th St. was constructed by the Barnes family, who lived there for 15 years.
The next owners lived there for four years before selling it to the Gillards, who lived there from
42 years.
Eugene and Blanche Barnes (1923-1938)2
Eugene and Blanche Barnes purchased the lot in 1923 and constructed the house a year later.
Eugene Bennett (Ben) Barnes was born April 24, 1877 in Oskaloosa, Iowa to Eugene and Ellen
Seeber Barnes. He moved to Colorado in 1903 and to Boulder in 1918. Eugene was an employee
of Mountain States Telephone for 40 years until his retirement in 1942. He was a member of the
Telephone Pioneers of America and a number of Masonic organizations in the Boulder and
2 Barnes, Eugene and Blanche. Clipping Files. Carnegie Library for Local History.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 7 of 19
Denver area, including South Denver Lodge 93, White Shrine of Jerusalem, El Jebel Shrine
Temple and the Boulder Shrine Club, Mount Sinai Commandery No. 7, Royal Arch Masons, and
Boulder Council No. 7. Eugene died in 1969 in Boulder and is buried in Green Mountain
Cemetery.
Blanche Hattie (Hatty) Barnes was born Dec. 28, 1884 in Denver. Blanche and Eugene married
on June 9, 1904 in Colorado Springs. In 1954, they celebrated their 50th anniversary with a
reception at their house at 925 University Ave. that was attended by 150 guests. Decorations
included bouquets of yellow roses, carnations and gloxinias and other yellow blossoms and Mr.
Barnes gave his wife a six-piece silver coffee service.
They had a son, John. Blanche was also very active in local Masonic groups,and was presiding
officer of the Queen Esther chapter No. 5, Oder of Eastern Star; Social Order of Beauceant; past
high priestess of the White Shrine of Jerusalem, Mizpah Chapter No. 4, and the Past Matrons
club. She was also a member of the Christian Science Church. She died in 1972 in Boulder and is
buried in Green Mountain Cemetery.
Hazel and Arthur Myers (1938-1941)
The Barnes sold the property to Arthur and Hazel Myers in 1938 and the couple lived there for
four years. The couple was married on Sep. 4, 1926 and Arthur worked as a sales representative
for Western Cutlery, one of the city’s largest employers at the time, and for ARF Product, Inc.
William and Eva Gillard (1942-1984)
The property’s longest residents were William and Eva Gillard, who purchased the property in
1942 and lived there for 42 years.
William F. Gillard was born on Nov. 20, 1896 in Colorado and a World War II Draft Card describes
him as a 5’11, 176 lbs white man with brown eyes, brown hair and a dark complexion. The 1958
Boulder City Directory lists William’s employer as the Boulder County road maintenance
department.
Eva Gladys Gillard was born on May 7, 1898 in Creighton, Nebraska to Frederick and Ollie Coe
Barnard. She moved to Boulder as a teenager, and married William on Aug. 6, 1921. She was a
member of the First United Methodist Church Circles, the Rebekahs, and War Mothers. The
couple had three children, Shirley, Richard and Doris. Prior to moving to Boulder, the Gillards
lived on a farm McPherson, NE. The Gillards moved to Boulder by 1942.
In 1976, the Gillards and five of their neighbors filed an injunction against the City Council and
the City of Boulder to prevent future construction in the Whittier Neighborhood Improvement
District. The group described the improvements such as neckdowns at intersections,
landscaping, pocket parks, and ornamental lighting and sidewalks to be “unnecessary” and
contended that residents in the neighborhood should not bear the costs since the
improvements were designed to benefit the entire city. The outcome of the injunction is
unknown.
William died in 1982, and Eva died in 1988. The couple is buried in Mountain View Memorial
Park.
CRITERIA FOR THE BOARD’S DECISION
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 8 of 19
Section 9-11-5(c), Public Hearing Before the Landmarks Board, B.R.C. 1981, specifies that in their
review of an application for local landmark designation, “the landmarks board shall determine
whether the proposed designation conforms with the purposes and standards in Sections 9-11-
1, Legislative Intent, and 9-11-2, City Council May Designate Landmarks and Historic Districts.”
Section 9-11-1, Legislative Intent, states:
a) The purpose of this chapter is to promote the public health, safety, and welfare by
protecting, enhancing, and perpetuating buildings, sites, and areas of the city
reminiscent of past eras, events, and persons important in local, state, or national
history or providing significant examples of architectural styles of the past. It is also the
purpose of this chapter to develop and maintain appropriate settings and environments
for such buildings, sites, and areas to enhance property values, stabilize neighborhoods,
promote tourist trade and interest, and foster knowledge of the city’s living heritage.
b) The City Council does not intend by this chapter to preserve every old building in the city
but instead to draw a reasonable balance between private property rights and the
public interest in preserving the city’s cultural, historic, and architectural heritage by
ensuring that demolition of buildings and structures important to that heritage will be
carefully weighed with other alternatives and that alterations to such buildings and
structures and new construction will respect the character of each such setting, not by
imitating surrounding structures, but by being compatible with them.
c) The City Council intends that in reviewing applications for alterations to and new
construction on landmarks or structures in a historic district, the Landmarks
Preservation Advisory Board shall follow relevant city policies, including, without
limitation, energy-efficient design, access for the disabled, and creative approaches to
renovation.
Section 9-11-2, City Council may Designate Landmarks and Historic Districts, states:
(a) Pursuant to the procedures in this chapter the City Council may by ordinance:
(1) Designate as a landmark an individual building or other feature or an integrated
group of structures or features on a single lot or site having a special character
and historical, architectural, or aesthetic interest or value and designate a
landmark site for each landmark;
Upon designation, the property included in any such designation is subject to all the
requirements of this code and other ordinances of the city.
To assist in the interpretation of the historic preservation ordinance, the Landmarks Board has
adopted significance criteria to use when evaluating applications for individual landmarks. The
criteria are included in Attachment D: Significance Criteria for Individual Landmarks.
ANALYSIS
Staff’s analysis is based on the criteria for review provided above.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 9 of 19
A. Does the proposed application protect, enhance, and perpetuate buildings, sites, and areas
of the city reminiscent of past eras, events, and persons important in local, state, or national
history or providing significant examples of architectural styles of the past?
B. Does the proposed application draw a reasonable balance between private property rights
and the public interest in preserving the City’s cultural, historic, and architectural heritage
by ensuring that demolition of buildings and structures important to that heritage will be
carefully weighed with other alternatives?
HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE:
Summary: The buildings at 2230 20th St. meets criteria 1, 2 and 4 for historic significance.
1. Date of Construction: 1924
Elaboration: The 1929 tax assessor card lists the house’s date of construction as 1924.
2. Association with Persons or Events: Barnes and Gillard families
Elaboration: The property at 2230 20th St. was constructed by Eugene and Blanche
Barnes, who lived there for 15 years. Eugene worked as a district telephone foreman for
Mountain States Telephone Company. The property’s longest residents were William
and Eva Gillard, who lived there for 42 years. William was employed by the county’s
road maintenance department. The Barnes and Gillards do not meet the designation
criteria for individual contributions to the development of the community, but do
represent Boulder’s working class families in the inter-war and post-war period.
3. Distinction in the Development of the Community: Whittier Neighborhood
Elaboration: The house is typical of a post-WWI residential building and contributes to
the historic and architectural diversity of the Whittier Neighborhood.
4. Recognition by Authorities: Historic Building Inventory Form, 1988.
Elaboration: The 1988 Historic Building Inventory Form found the property to be in
excellent condition with minor alterations. The form notes that the house is significant
as it represents a type, period, or method of construction, noting that “the house is an
example of bungalow-style architecture and lends diversity to the Whittier
neighborhood.” The surveyors identified the building as potentially contributing to a
historic district.
ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE:
Summary: The buildings at 2230 20th St. meet architectural significance criteria 1 and 3.
1. Recognized Period or Style: Craftsman Bungalow
Elaboration: The house has elements of the Craftsman Bungalow style popular in the
1910s and 1920s. While relatively simple in design and detailing, the house is a well-
preserved and indicative example of Bungalow architecture from the interwar period of
development in the area.
2. Architect or Builder of Prominence: Unknown
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 10 of 19
3. Artistic Merit: Craftsman detailing
ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNIFICANCE:
Summary: The buildings at 2230 20th St. meets the criteria for environmental significance 1, 2, 4 and 5.
1. Site Characteristics: Residential historic character.
Elaboration: The house is sited along 20th Street between Mapleton Avenue and Pine
Street. It is located within the boundaries of the identified potential Whittier Historic
District and the house retains its historic residential character.
2. Compatibility with Site: Residential historic character.
Elaboration: The building is representative of the typical building patterns in Whittier
and contributes to the residential character of the neighborhood. The property retains
its historic relationship to its lot and surrounding neighborhood.
3. Geographic Importance: The house is a familiar visual feature on the 2200 block of 20th
Street as it is located close to the sidewalk and along an alley.
4. Environmental Appropriateness: Residential historic character. Residential historic
character
Elaboration: The house and surroundings are complementary and careful integrated.
5. Area Integrity: Potential Whittier Historic District .
Elaboration: The 2300 block of 20th Street is located in the identified potential Whittier
Historic District and retains a high degree of historic integrity to the original
development of that neighborhood.
LANDMARK NAME
Staff recommends the landmark property be known as the Barnes-Gillard House, recognizing
Eugene and Blanche Barnes, who constructed the house in 1924 and lived there until 1938, and
William and Eva Gillard, the owners who lived in the property the longest, from 1942-1984. This
is consistent with the Landmark Board’s Guidelines for Names of Landmarked Structures and
Sites (1988) and the National Register of Historic Places Guidelines for Designation. See
Attachment E: Guidelines for Names of Landmarked Structures and Sites.
LANDMARK BOUNDARY
Staff recommends that the boundary be established to follow the property boundaries, as
proposed by the property owner and consistent with current and past practices and the
National Register Guidelines for establishing landmark boundaries.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 11 of 19
Figure 9. Proposed Landmark Boundary.
PROPOSED PLAQUE LANGUAGE (LIMITED TO 350 CHARACTERS, INCL. SPACES)
Barnes-Gillard House (1924)
Eugene and Blanche Barnes constructed this Craftsman Bungalow house in 1924 and lived here
until 1938. Eugene worked as a foreman for the Mountain States & Telephone Company.
William and Eva Gillard lived here from 1942-1982. This house adds to the architectural diversity
of the Whittier neighborhood.
NEXT STEPS
Within 45 days of the hearing date, the Landmarks Board must adopt specific written findings
and conclusions approving, approving with modifications, or disapproving the application.
Should the board disapprove the application, the board must notify the City Council of that
action within 30 days of the hearing date. City Council may call up a decision disapproving a
designation. Should an application be disapproved, the same application may not be submitted
for a period of one year.
If the board finds that the proposed designation conforms to Sections 9-11-1 and 9-11-2, B.R.C.
1981, it shall adopt specific findings and conclusions approving or modifying and approving the
application. If the board approves the proposed designation, the application will be forwarded
to City Council (within 45 days) for a public hearing. The public hearing before City Council must
be held within 100 days of the Landmark Board’s decision recommending designation.
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 12 of 19
ATTACHMENTS
A: Landmark Designation Application
B: Tax Assessor Card
C: 1988 Historic Building Inventory Form (link)
D: Significance Criteria for Individual Landmarks (link)
E: Guidelines for Names of Landmarked Structures and Sites (link)
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 13 of 19
Application for Individual Landmark
Name of Building: Date:
Address:
Owner(s): Phone:
Address(es):
Applicant:Phone:
Address:
Date of Construction:
Type of Construction:
Architectural Style / Period:
Architect / Builder:
Condition of Exterior:
Additions / Alterations to Exterior:
Date of Alteration(s) / Addition(s):
Please attach a copy of the legal description of the property.
Fee $25 (if applicable)
A filing fee of $25.00 is required to file an application for designation of an individual landmark.
Should the Landmarks Board initiate designation of a property or area, there is no fee involved.
I certify that the information and exhibits herewith submitted are true and correct to the best of my knowledge.
Signature:
Address:
Designation initiated by: Date:
Attachment A - Individual Landmark Designation Application
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 14 of 19
July 29, 2020
Landmarks Design Review Committee
Re: Landmark Alteration Certificate
Address: 2230 20th Street, Boulder, CO 80302
Project Description:
My husband and I purchased the single family residence located at 2230 20th street with the intention of
renovating the inside and adding a single story addition to the North of the existing structure so we can move my
mother‐in‐law from Florida here to reside there. The main level of the bungalow currently has one very small
bedroom, bathroom and kitchen/living area, and a basement that has a very low ceiling height of 6’ 4”.
The goal of the renovation/addition is to update the existing interior on the main level, which has extensive
deferred maintenance, have enough bedrooms so that she can have a guest (her sister is a frequent visitor) and a
caretaker, and extend the basement below the addition so there is more usable space with a normal ceiling height.
The residence is located on a half lot controlled by a P.U.D., with an underlying zoning of RL‐1. We submitted a Pre‐
Application for a Minor Amendment to the City of Boulder on June 1, 2020. During our Pre‐App meeting in late
June we were told that the home was “potentially eligible for individual Landmarks designation” and that the
Landmarks Design Review Committee would likely ask that the property be proposed for a Landmark Designation
and require an LAC as part of the Minor Amendment approval process. We then met with James Hewat on July 21,
who agreed this would be the recommended process.
While this was an unexpected aspect to this project and we would not have applied for Landmarks Designation
otherwise, we are happy to work with the City and LDRC on the design and are therefore submitting this LAC
application as well as an application for Landmark Designation in tandem.
When adjusting the design of the addition, our architect, David Biek of Arcadea Architecture, used the Historic
Preservation Design Guidelines provided by the city, as well as direction provided by James Hewat during our
online meeting.
A few design notes:
‐ The proposed roofline creates a very obvious distinction between the existing house and the addition.
‐ The proposed roofline is lower than the existing and the ridge is perpendicular to the street to minimize
its importance.
‐ There is a “neck” that adjoins the addition to the existing house in the front to further provide a
distinction between the old and the new. The attached portion is set back 3 ft. on the street side.
o As the lot has a depth of only 50 feet, we cannot move the addition back farther to the East
without giving up the only space available for a small private patio (or extending beyond the
existing). There are also existing mature trees in the back that are important for privacy and
shade and to maintain the character of the property and neighborhood.
o The outdoor space is extremely important to my mother‐in‐law and would be to any occupant. It
is only 8 ft. wide, which is barely big enough for a table and chairs and barbeque.
o We are unable to move the addition any more North because we are utilizing the existing curb
cut and drive apron, as requested by the City. There would be no way to park a vehicle if the
drive moved any further north.
o The neighbors to the north have requested that the addition not be built too close to their home
and their property is part of the PUD.
‐ Currently, the house is brick and stucco with wood trim around the windows and doors. The proposed
addition would have a stucco exterior in a color that will recede and not compete with the existing.
o White trim around existing windows and doors and would remain and we would have white trim
around the new windows and back door.
Attachment A - Individual Landmark Designation Application
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 15 of 19
o We will plan to use the same shingle type that is on the existing roof for the roof on the addition.
‐ There is a wire and wood fence that exists today (I believe it was added in the mid 2000s. It does not
appear in pictures from the 1990s) that is in major disrepair and will be repaired or replaced with a fence
that is more appropriate to the period.
Attachment A - Individual Landmark Designation Application
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 16 of 19
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Height of Building_-:{_t ____________
A�IOUNT IYEAR $ 1938 --$ 1939 --$ 1940 $ 1941 $ 1942 $ 1943 $1944 $ 1945 $ ____ 11946$ 1947
1$
ANNO AL ASSESSMENT LAND I IMPROVEMENTS TOTAL
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Attachment B - 2230 20th Street Tax Assessor Card
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 17 of 19
r } CLASS OF BUILi>iNG HEIGHT ____________ C;::oh�e;::ck;:f.-_ Check ROOF LIGHT dneck DESCRIPTION Check Give Numbers ROOMS STORIES 1 Single �esidence. ______ -�-No. of Stories ______________ I l__ CONSTRUCTION D l i------------1--" Electricity ___________________,--------23-B unpgexlo--w---A--p-t ___ C ___ t ___ --·--1-. _·•_• __ F_O_U_N_D_A_T_I_O_N __ l---1 Wood Shingle-------------_i{_ Gas _________________ ---------- u a , ., r ·--O"l Fl T Bri�k ·-----•--------------__ 7 Composition Shingle_______ 1 ---------------------------4-at or errace _______, v 5 A t t H Concrete __________________ Tar and Gravel --------------------------------par men ouse______ ------------6_Hotel ----------�-------Stone ---------------------Prepared Paper __________ _ 7 St B "Id" Wood---------------------Sheet Iron _______________ _ -ore u1 mg ________ _ 8------· ------------------Tile-----------------------Copper--------------------1--------------1--1 PRIVATE GARAGE Size ________________________ _ Bnsem't 2 Living Room ___ _ _J __ Dining Room ___ _ Dinette ________ _ Kitchen ________ _ Breakfast Nook ______________ _ 9 Office Bul.ld" ------------------------- --Concrete Tile _____________ _ -mg---------10--Hospital or Sanitarium_ ---.----------------· --------Clay Tile _________________ _ Slate _____________________ _ Construction _________ 17�----Floor ____________ ----!�----Bed Room __________________ 71 _______ _ Bath Room ________________________ _ 11-:-Bank Building _________ _ 1-------------1---1 Asbestos Shingle _________ _ Roof _______________________ _ Toilet Room _____________ _ 1�-Theatre _______________ _ BASEMENT Tin ______________________ _ Heat _______________________ _ Shower Room __ _ 13-Warehouse ____________ _U-Factory ______ _______ __ _ ____ Quarter-------------------:z-:1-------_-_-_--_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-,1.-_1 ·::::�:::::::: �:�������:��:�::Sleeping Porch __ 15-Public Garage __________ ____ Half----------------------STYLE J-------------1--I Sun Room _______ ---------__________ _ 16-Private Garage _____________ !h;;e-Quarter ------------i-G-a-b -le _________ -_-_-__ -_-_-_-__ -_-_-__ -_-_-_.1...7-_-__ .,1 SHEDS ANI) BARNS Den __________________________ _ 17-Ser vice Station _____________ C u ---;;1-----------· ------_i7_-__ Hip ___________________________ Size __ 1---------1Const., __ J ... ____Storage Room ___ ---------18-Hot House or Gr. House ____ emen oor -------------Fl s· C t f/.,<J Office--------------------19-Poultry House__________Finished Walls and Ceiling_ at --------------------------ize __ ---------ons · --------Halls __________ _ L d Gambrel _________________ _ 20-Barns or Sheds_________ ____ aun ry ------------------M d ansar _________________ _ ------------------------------------------------------------Leanto ___________________ _ LOCAL IMPRO VEMENTSStreet Paving _______________ _ Alley Paving _________________ ---· Sidewalks ___________________ _ EXTERIO R PLUMBING ------------1--1_,Curbing _____________________ _FINISH Unfinished------+----------_7 ____ _3 Common Brick ____________Old Style__________________ ✓ Water ____________ -7t:,p ___ _ Modern _____ ____ _______ ___ Storm Sewer ______ /_-:'.q __________ _ Plastered, Plain_f---------_Y-_______ _ Plastered, Ornan _________________________ _ -------------1----1 Pressed Brick ____________ _CO NSTRUCTION Frame ----------------------/ Wire Cut Brick ____________No. Bath Tubs ____________ _/ ___ Sanitary Sewer _____________ _ Softwood Floor _________ _ Papered __________________ 7_ Painted or Tinted _________ .!:( __ _ Brick ----------------------Glazed Brick _____________ _ Tile _______________________ _ Wood Siding _____________ _ No. Shower Baths _________ -r-Electricity __________________ _ No. Toilets________________ Gas _________________________ _No. Lavatories ____________ _I_ __ Telephone ___________________ _ No. Urinals ______________ _ Hardwood Floor __________ �"' ___________ _ Softwood Finish ________________________ _ Stone _____________________ _ Concrete, Plain or Block __ _ Concrete, Reinforced __ ··----�----Steel Frame ________________ j_ __ _ �;����;�;-�-;-������-�----Wood Shingles ___________ _ Cement Stucco ________________ No. Laundry Tubs. ________ -�---------------------------------Hardwood Finish ___ ·-----------__________ _ Kellastone ___ ______ _______ ____ No. Sinks ________ ---· ____ _ Stone _____________________ Sanitary Closets __________ _ Corrugated Iron___________ Cess Pool ________________ _ Terra Cotta ___________________ ·---------------------------Tile ______________________ _ HEATING J ___ t-------------1--1 Tile ______________________________________ _ ';;;'. Marble or Onyx _________ _ MISCELLANEOUS 1-------------+-=-""'-I Wall Board _____________ _ Sideboards __________________ _ Buffet----�-------------f· Sheetrock _______________________________Cabinet ________ !::'�---------Celotex ______________________ _ Cheap __ i[ ________________________________ _Medium ___________________ _ Stove ·---..zz;_--------------Hot Air_ -�-�-: ___ _Book Cases __________________ _ Wainscoting __________________ _ Beam Ceiling ________________ _ Metal Ceiling ___________ 1------____ _ Good ______________________ _ Fire Resisting _____________ _ Non-Fire Resisting ________ _ STATE OF REPAIRS Bad------------------------Fair _______________________ _ Good ____________________ _ New ------------�----------Hot Water _______________ _ Incinerator __________________ _ OUTSIDE Tl<IM Steam ___________________ _ Sky Lights __________________ _ Refrigerator or Cooler ______ _ V No. Fireplaces ____________Wood------------------------· No. Dummy Fireplaces ___ _ Bay Windows _______________ _ Terra Cotta ______________ _ Stone ____________________ _ Galv. Iron _______________ _ Concrete _________________ _ Air Conditioned __________ _ Dormer Windows ____________ _ FUEL Porches _____________________ _ Coal _____________________ _ ------------------------------
��S--�, ___ :A-��-���:::� / -------------------------------
\ ·------------------------------Electricity ________________ _ _________________________________ _ REMARKS Attic Give Numbers ---------------------------------------------------------··------
Attachment B - 2230 20th Street Tax Assessor Card
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 18 of 19
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Attachment B - 2230 20th Street Tax Assessor Card
Item 5A - 2230 20th St. memo 2.3.2021 Page 19 of 19