Laserfiche WebLink
neighborhood. <br />Prohibited <br />Prefabricated metal sheds shall not be used. <br />Not Recommended <br />Prefabricated wood composition sheds should not be used unless they conform to all other guidelines and standards. <br />STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Staff recommends approval of the free standing shed located at the rear of the <br />property in the approximate location of the demolished one car garage noted on the 1932 Assessor Card. <br />On a motion by Linda Riley with a second by Jerry Niezgodski <br />Vote: 4 -0 <br />COA 2010 -0720 was approved with a unanimous vote <br />STAFF REPORT <br />CONCERNING APPLICATION FOR A <br />CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS <br />Date: July 28, 2010 <br />Application Number: 2010 -0723 <br />Property Location: 944 Riverside Drive <br />Architectural Style/Date /Architect or Builder: Dutch Colonial Revival /1903 <br />Property Owner: David Betson and Jennifer Warlick <br />Landmark or District Designation: Riverside Drive LHD /Chapin Park NR <br />Rating: Contributing <br />DESCRIPTION OF STRUCTURE/ SITE: The 2 %s storey frame house has an irregular plan and is set upon a stone <br />foundation. It has a gambrel roof with gabled returns and a gabled dormer projection covered in asphalt shingles. The <br />walls are Aluminum sided. The windows appear to be original 3/1 on the second floor and multi -paned on the first <br />floor all with aluminum storms. There is an open porch with stone pillars, piers and knee walls and wooden arches <br />above the openings. <br />ALTERATIONS: The house is aluminum sided. The Aluminum was removed from the porch and the wood porch <br />features restored along with the addition of porch gutters with COA #2004 - 0702 -2. An Oak tree was removed with <br />COA#2004 -0629. The house was re- roofed with a staff approval on 7/18/91. All 93 windows have aluminum storm <br />windows. <br />APPLICATION ITEMS: Remove non - original aluminum siding on 2" floor this year (first floor at later time), repair <br />and restore roof to original Dutch Colonial and completely tear off and re -roof with Landmark shingles on gables of <br />dormers. Will use the existing wood shakes/clapboards if in good repair but if not will restore /replace with appropriate <br />(similar) fiber cement product to match original siding. Remove hickory tree in side yard which has died. Will not <br />replace because the area already has a significant number of trees. Remove dogwood in southeast comer of lot that is <br />dead/dying and replace with other suitable tree or shrub. <br />DESCRIPTION OF PROPOSED PROJECT. The homeowner wishes to remove the aluminum siding application on <br />the second floor to restore the original Dutch Colonial roofline and the original wood siding features on the second <br />floor walls. He proposes restoring the wood siding if it is possible or replacing it with a fiber cement board <br />(Certainteed siding material and roofing materials) to match the original. He is also considering the possibility of using <br />all wood siding replacements. He really won't be able to determine which route to take until the siding is removed and <br />the original surface evaluated. He also proposed a complete tear off and re -roof with architectural shingles of the entire <br />roofing system. The homeowners wish to remove dead and dying trees in the yard but replace only the dogwood with a <br />tree or shrub in the southeast comer of the yard. <br />STANDARDS AND GUIDELINES: <br />B. BUILDING SITE, LANDSCAPING <br />AND ACCESSORIES <br />Individual properties in the district are characterized by a house located in the center of a flat lawn, often divided by a <br />walk leading to the front entrance. Several of the residences are sited on two or more building lots; however, the <br />preponderance of the homes have been erected on a single lot. Most of the properties include a double garage, usually <br />located at the rear of the property. The majority of garages are accessed from straight driveways leading from the main <br />thoroughfare, while a few are accessed from the alley. There are also a few homes with a covered carport located at the <br />rear of the property, as well as a few with circular driveways. Driveway and sidewalk materials include concrete, <br />asphalt and brick. All of the properties have trees and most have trimmed shrubbery and/or hedges. Most of the houses <br />conform to a uniform setback line within each block. <br />Required <br />Plants, trees, fencing, walkways, private yard lights, signs (house numbers) and benches which reflect the property's <br />history and development shall be retained. <br />Recommended <br />New site work should be based upon actual knowledge of the past appearance of the property found in photographs, <br />drawings and newspapers. New site work should be appropriate to existing surrounding site elements in scale, type and <br />appearance. Plant materials and trees in close proximity to the building that are causing deterioration to the building's <br />historic fabric should be removed. However, trees and plant materials that must be removed should be immediately <br />2 <br />