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HRCA No. 2025-15, HRC No. 2026-2, HPPA No. 2026-2 — The E.A. Noe House (2117 <br /> N. Greenleaf Street) <br /> March 5, 2026 <br /> Page 3 <br /> 1933 he applied for a permit to rebuild the chimney and in 1941 to re-roof the residence <br /> (City of Santa Ana 1933 and 1941, The Register 1933). In 1983, M.A. McAlpin owned the <br /> property, but no additional information was identified on McAlpin (Los Angeles Times <br /> 1983). The current owners, Travis Beck Allen-Walter and Charles Reuben Allen-Walter, <br /> acquired the property from Fili Moala and Jordan Moala, husband and wife, in 2024. In <br /> 2023, the property was added to the National Register of Historic Places as a contributing <br /> property to the Floral Park National Register Historic District. <br /> Located on a mid-block parcel in the Floral Park neighborhood, the E.A. Noe House <br /> consists of a one-story, single-family residence and detached garage constructed in a <br /> Tudor Revival style. The parcel is bounded on the west by North Greenleaf Street and on <br /> the north, south, and east by private property. The one-story residence has an irregular <br /> plan and a concrete foundation. The roof is cross-gabled and clad in concrete tiles and <br /> generally has broad, closed eaves with exposed beams. <br /> Exterior walls sheathed in brick throughout and stucco within the gables and rear <br /> elevation. Facing North Greenleaf Street to the west, the asymmetrical main fagade is <br /> characterized by a wing-and-gable form and a recessed porch sheltered by an extension <br /> of the roof and an uncovered concrete patio enclosed by a brick-clad pony wall. The main <br /> entrance has a solid wood door with a single pane of glass at the center. Windows on the <br /> main elevation include a large wood frame tripartite window with a central fixed pane <br /> flanked by two six-over-one double hung sash windows with divided light transoms and a <br /> second window within the front gable with a wood frame fixed pane and six panes of <br /> glass. Additionally, the west fagade features two sets of wood frame French doors which <br /> open to the concrete patio. <br /> Secondary facades generally feature brick walls punctuated by one-over-one wood frame <br /> double hung sash windows and a steel frame bay window with small casement windows <br /> on the north and south sides. The property has an east-trending extension with a flat roof <br /> and stucco exterior. The extension has wood sash fixed pane and casement windows, <br /> one of which is covered by an awning. The south elevation features a second entrance <br /> with a wood paneled door and sash window accessible by concrete steps and a small <br /> concrete patio enclosed by concrete pone walls; the entrance sits under an awning. The <br /> east elevation features two small, fixed pane windows, a small bay window with a hipped <br /> roof clad in wood shake shingles with a central wood frame fixed pane window with six <br /> lites flanked by casement windows with three lites, and a set of wood frame French doors <br /> accessed by brick steps and covered by an open lattice patio cover added in 1990. <br /> At the rear, western end of the property is a detached garage constructed in 1988. The <br /> two-story garage is rectangular in plan on a concrete foundation and capped with a <br /> steeply pitched front gabled roof clad in composition shingles with enclosed eaves. The <br /> exterior is clad in stucco and brick. On the west, primary fagade are two large openings <br /> with metal roll-up garage doors, an entrance with a glazed wood frame door, and two <br />