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RESOURCES PRESENT: <br />® Building ❑ Structure ❑ Object <br />MOVED? ® No ❑ Yes ❑ Unknown <br />❑ Site ❑ District ® Element of District <br />Date: Original Location: <br />❑ Other <br />STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: (Discuss importance in terms of historical or architectural context as defined by theme, <br />period. geographic scope, and integrity.) <br />Santa Ana was founded by William Spurgeon in 1869 as a speculative townsite on part of the Spanish land grant known as Rancho <br />Santiago de Santa Ana. Early growth and development was stimulated by the arrival of the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1878 and the <br />Santa Fe Railroad in 1886. By the end of the 1880s, Santa Ana's downtown business district was defined by five city blocks of brick <br />commercial buildings on 4th Street, with the heart of the city at the intersection of 4th and Main Streets. (Thomas, 8:1) <br />The period of 1911 -1915 saw many characteristic new business blocks or remodels along Fourth Strcet, and by the 1920s Santa Ana's <br />downtown had expanded in each direction to include both commercial and civic development. The California style of living <br />evidenced itself in the abundance of Spanish Colonial Revival style buildings, which were commonly built during the 1920s and early <br />1930s. Occupying a prominent corner in the downtown business district, the Santora Building is an exceptional example of such an <br />improvement. It is highly significant for both its historical role in Santa Ana's commercial and civic history and for its architectural <br />merit and association with the career of Frank Lansdowne, one of the premier architects based in Santa Ana during the 1920s. Since <br />the 1980s. the Santora Building has served as an anchor for the developing Artists' Village. <br />Character -defining exterior features of the Santora Building which should be preserved include but are not limited to: building scale <br />and configuration on the two public elevations; exterior materials and finishes; all cast stone and other architectural embellishment; <br />wrought iron grillework and balconies; tiled bulkheads; and original fenestration. <br />SUMMARY /CONCLUSION: <br />This building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as an individual resource and in 1984 as a contributor to <br />the Downtown Historic District. Under the regulations implementing the California Register of Historical Resources, the building is <br />also listed in the California Register, The Santora Building has been included in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Property for <br />several reasons. It is an archetypal example of the Churrigueresque variant of the Spanish Colonial Revival style. It was designed by <br />prominent Santa Ana architect Frank Lansdowne. It is significant for its historic and continuing role in die commercial, public and <br />social life of Santa Ana. The Santora Building has been categorized as "Landmark" because the building "has historical /cultural <br />significance to the City of Santa Ana" and has "unique architectural significance" (Municipal Code Section 30- 2.2(1)). <br />OWNER AND ADDRESS: Santora <br />1200 North <br />Santa Ana. CA 92701 -3640 <br />1 <br />cn MIunraemplame.amaJway ?III N <br />i q Jl <br />Page 3 of 4 <br />25C -8 <br />