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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br />M.E. LeSourd House <br />2447 North Heliotrope Drive <br />Santa Ana, CA 92706 <br />NAME <br />M.E. LeSourd House <br />REF. NO. <br />ADDRESS <br />2447 North Heliotrope Drive <br />CITY <br />Santa Ana <br />ZIP <br />1 92706 <br />ORANGE COUNTY <br />YEAR BUILT <br />1945 <br />LOCAL REGISTER CATEGORY: Key <br />HISTORIC DISTRICT <br />NIA <br />NEIGHBORHOOD <br />Floral Park <br />CALIFORNIA REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION <br />C/3 <br />CALIFORNIA REGISTER STATUS CODE <br />5S3 <br />Location: ❑ Not for Publication ® Unrestricted <br />❑ Prehistoric ® Historic ❑ Both <br />ARCHITECTURAL STYLE: Ranch House <br />Widely published in Sunset and House Beautiful magazines, the Ranch House dominated post -World War II residential <br />expansion and represented the most popular house form in the United States from the 1950s through 1970s. The Ranch <br />House originated in the 1930's designs of Southern California architect Cliff May, who sought to reinvent the west's <br />vernacular housing traditions by combining the form and massing of the traditional ranch house with a modernist's <br />concern for informality, expressed in materials and plan, and indoor -outdoor integration. <br />While the style includes several variants, a basic set of character -defining features applies to most examples. In form and <br />massing, the style evokes a sprawling ranch that developed over time, with a central block extended by wings of varying <br />roof heights. Generally L-shaped or U-shaped in plan, the Ranch House typically has a one-story profile with strong <br />horizontal emphasis expressed through a low pitched or flat roof with wide overhanging eaves. Asymmetrical in design, <br />the Ranch House is often sheathed in and accented with rustic materials such as board -and -batten siding, high brick <br />foundations, art stone, and wood shake roofs. Indoor -outdoor integration is achieved through the use of recessed or <br />extended porches, set low to the ground, and the generous use of large picture, ribbon, or corner windows. Window <br />detailing can include wood frames, decorative shutters, and diamond -patterned muntins. Ornamentation includes <br />rusticated elements, such as carved porch supports and exposed rafters, uneven rakes and flared eaves, and faux dove <br />cotes and bird houses. <br />SUMMARY/CONCLUSION: <br />The M.E. LeSourd house qualifies for listing in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties under Criterion 1 as an <br />intact example, and one of the first to be constructed immediately post -World War II, of the Craftsman -influenced variant <br />of the Ranch style. Additionally, the house has been categorized as "Key" because it "has a distinctive architectural style <br />and quality" as an example of early post -World War II Ranch style in Santa Ana. (Santa Ana Municipal Code, Section 30- <br />2.2). <br />