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25B - 1106 N. SPURGEON STREET
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25B - 1106 N. SPURGEON STREET
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Last modified
1/3/2012 4:44:43 PM
Creation date
8/14/2006 4:59:24 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Item #
25B
Date
8/21/2006
Destruction Year
2011
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<br />EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br /> <br />CLAYCOMB HOUSE <br />11 06 North Spurgeon Street <br />Santa Ana, CA 92701 <br /> <br />NAME Claycomb House I REF. NO. 22 <br />ADDRESS 1106 North Spurgeon Street <br />CITY Santa Ana ZIP 192701 I ORANGE COUNTY <br />YEAR BUILT 1907 LOCAL REGISTER CATEGORY: Key <br />HISTORIC DISTRICT I French Park NEIGHBORHOOD I French Park <br />NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EV ALUA TION r C NATIONAL REGISTER STATUS CODE I ID <br /> <br />Location: 0 Not for Publication <br /> <br />i:8J Unrestricted <br /> <br />o Prehistoric <br /> <br />i:8J Historic <br /> <br />o Both <br /> <br />ARCHITECTURAL STYLE: Prairie School, Colonial Revival <br /> <br />The Prairie School refers to a group of architects centered in Chicago at the beginning of the twentieth century. Primary amongst <br />them was Frank Lloyd Wright, under whom Prairie School designs reached their apex. Echoing the uninterrupted horizontal lines of <br />the American prairie, Prairie style homes-it was largely a domestic movement-are usually characterized by broadly pitched hipped <br />roofs with deep overhangs; two stories in height, often with one-story wings; front porches with massive porch roof supports; and <br />detailing which emphasizes the horizontal. A corrunon, vernacular interpretation of the type, sometimes referred to as the Prairie Box <br />or the American Foursquare, is box-like in massing and plan, with hipped or gabled dormers, porches across all or a portion of the <br />fa9ade, and detailing culled from the vocabularies of a variety of styles, including Mission Revival, Colonial Revival, and Craftsman. <br /> <br />The most universal of all American domestic building styles, the Colonial Revival has been popular since the 1876 Centennial <br />celebration in Philadelphia stimulated a patriotic interest in the American architectural past. Whether drawing upon Georgian, <br />Federal, or Dutch Colonial prototypes, Colonial Revival buildings feature rectangular building plans and designs which are usually <br />symmetrical, or at least highly regular and balanced, in composition. Roofs are corrunonly side-gabled, hipped, or gambreled, <br />sometimes accented with dormers. Porches, one or two stories in height, are often included, mostly as central focal points, and <br />frequently incorporate classical elements such as columns, pilasters, and entablatures. Doorways are adorned with classical surrounds <br />and pediments; sidelights, transoms, and fanlights are not uncorrunon. Windows are typically double-hung sash, with multiple lights <br />in the upper sash. French doors and Palladian windows are also utilized. Depending on location, Colonial Revival buildings have <br />wood, brick, or stucco exteriors (McAlester, 320-326). <br /> <br />SUMMARY/CONCLUSION: <br /> <br />The Claycomb House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 as a contributor to the French Park Historic <br />District. Under the regulations implementing the California Register of Historical Resources, the building is also listed in the <br />California Register. Included in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Property, the Claycomb House has been categorized as "Key" <br />because it "has a distinctive architectural style and quality" as an intact example of the American Foursquare style that was <br />characteristic of the period around the turn of the twentieth century in Santa Ana (Municipal Code, Section 30-2.2). <br /> <br />EXHIBIT 2 <br />25a~6 <br /> <br />
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