Sep 08, 2011
- Charmaine Bantugan
California MPS House at 1360 Lida Street- National Register of Historic Places
Statement of Significance: The house at 1360 Lida Street, built in 1888, is a locally significant example of the Queen Anne subtype of the single-family residence property type identified in the Multiple Property Documentation Form “Late 19th /Early 20th Century Development and Architecture in Pasadena.” It meets registration requirements listed in the Multiple Property Documentation Form under National Register Criterion C as a notable example of the Queen Anne subtype of the single-family residence property type. The house at 1360 Lida Street is locally significant under Criterion C as a notable example of the Queen-Anne subtype of the single-family residence property type identified in the Multiple Property Documentation Form “Late 19th /Early 20th Century Development and Architecture in Pasadena.” It retains nearly all of its character-defining features from its original construction including the original roof form, wall materials, fenestration patterns, and ornamental features. The house exhibits elements of the Queen Anne subtype including one-story height, asymmetrical massing, wood drop channel siding, projecting polygonal bays with gabled roofs, narrowly proportioned double-hung windows with bordered glass, decorative millwork detailing (turned posts, curvilinear cutout ornament, lace-like brackets), wood tongue-and-groove skirting, and hexagonal fish-scale shingles). The historic design, workmanship, feeling, and materials are strongly present in both the house and in its setting. In design, the house resembles in plan, style, and detail the houses at 324 S. Euclid Avenue and 745 N. Marengo Avenue.
California MPS House at 1360 Lida Street- National Register of Historic Places
Statement of Significance: The house at 1360 Lida Street, built in 1888, is a locally significant example of the Queen Anne subtype of the single-family residence property type identified in the Multiple Property Documentation Form “Late 19th /Early 20th Century Development and Architecture in Pasadena.” It meets registration requirements listed in the Multiple Property Documentation Form under National Register Criterion C as a notable example of the Queen Anne subtype of the single-family residence property type. The house at 1360 Lida Street is locally significant under Criterion C as a notable example of the Queen-Anne subtype of the single-family residence property type identified in the Multiple Property Documentation Form “Late 19th /Early 20th Century Development and Architecture in Pasadena.” It retains nearly all of its character-defining features from its original construction including the original roof form, wall materials, fenestration patterns, and ornamental features. The house exhibits elements of the Queen Anne subtype including one-story height, asymmetrical massing, wood drop channel siding, projecting polygonal bays with gabled roofs, narrowly proportioned double-hung windows with bordered glass, decorative millwork detailing (turned posts, curvilinear cutout ornament, lace-like brackets), wood tongue-and-groove skirting, and hexagonal fish-scale shingles). The historic design, workmanship, feeling, and materials are strongly present in both the house and in its setting. In design, the house resembles in plan, style, and detail the houses at 324 S. Euclid Avenue and 745 N. Marengo Avenue.
Sep 08, 2011
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