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<br />EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />JOE LOWELL HOUSE <br />924 North Lowell Street <br />Santa Ana, CA 92706 <br /> <br />NAME Joe Lowell House I REF. NO. <br />ADDRESS 924 North Lowell Street <br />CITY Santa Ana ZIP 92706 ORANGECOUNTY <br />YEAR BUILT 1924 LOCAL REGISTER CATEGORY: Key <br />HISTORIC DISTRICT IN/A NEIGHBORHOOD I Washington Square <br />NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION I A,C NATIONAL REGISTER STATUS CODE SSl <br /> <br />Location: <br /> <br />D Not for Publication <br /> <br />IZI Umestricted <br /> <br />D Prehistoric <br /> <br />IZI Historic <br /> <br />D Both <br /> <br />ARCHITECTURAL STYLE: Mission/Spanish Colonial Revival, Pueblo Revival <br /> <br />The Mission/Spanish Colonial Revival style, as its name implies, encompasses two major subcategories. The Mission Revival <br />vocabulary, popular between 1890 and 1920, drew its inspiration from the missions of the Southwest. Identifying features include <br />curved parapets (or espadaña); red tiled roofs and coping; low-pitched roofs, often with overhanging eaves; porch roofs supported by <br />large, square piers; arches; and wall surfaces commonly covered in smooth stucco. The Spanish Colonial Revival flourished between <br />1915 and 1940, reaching its apex during the 1920s and 1930s. The movement received widespread attention after the Panama- <br />.alifOrnia Exposition in San Diego in 1915, where lavish interpretations of Spanish and Mexican prototypes were showcased. Easily <br />ecognizable hallmarks of the Spanish Colonial Revival are low-pitched roofs, usually with little or no overhangs and red tile roof <br />coverings, flat roofs surrounded by tiled parapets; and stuccoed walls. The Spanish vocabulary also includes arches; asymmetry; <br />balconies and patios; window grilles; and decorative elements of wood, wrought iron, tile, or stone. <br /> <br />The Pueblo Revival fITst appeared in California in the early years of the twentieth century, but only rose to popularity in the 1920s and <br />1930s, primarily in the Southwest. Combining the features of the Mission and Spanish Revivals with the vocabulary of Native <br />American pueblos, the style is characterized by stuccoed exteriors that either simulate or mask adobe construction, flat roofs with <br />irregular parapets, buttressed comers, and projecting roof beams, called vigas, extending through wall surfaces. Openings are flat- <br />headed, rather than arched, and may have rough-hewn wooden timbers set flush with the wall surface used as lintels. The stepped <br />back massing and handmade quality of the original pueblos is often evoked (McAlester, pages 434-437). <br /> <br />SUMMARY/CONCLUSION: <br /> <br />The Joe Lowell House qualifies for listing in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties under Criterion 1, as a building with the <br />"distinguishing characteristics of an architectural style or period." The property also qualifies for the Santa Ana Register under <br />Criterion 4b, for its association with Joe Lowell, who was instrumental to the development of Washington Square. Additionally, the <br />house has been categorized as "Key" because it "has a distinctive architectural style and quality" as an example of the Spanish <br />Colonial Revival style influenced by the Pueblo Revival, and for its association "with a significant person" in the history of the area, <br />Joe Lowell. (Municipal Code Section 30-2.2)." <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />EXHIBIT 2 <br />Page 1 of 5 <br /> <br />758-5 <br />