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July 2018
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July 2018
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South Bend HPC
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Minutes
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1001404
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Four in favor, three opposed. <br />Vote: 4-3 COA#2017-0905C Approved. <br />5.803 W Washington COA#2017-0905D #10443-16 Local Landmark <br />Representation by Todd Zeiger, 801 W. Washington <br />STAFF REPORT <br />CONCERNING APPLICATION FOR A <br />CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS <br />Date: September 7, 2017 <br />Application Number: 2017-0905D <br />Property Location: 803 W Washington, South Bend, IN 46601 <br />Architectural Style/Date/Architect or Builder: Romanesque Revival / 1890 <br />Property Owner: Indiana Landmarks <br />Landmark or District Designation: Local Landmark Ordinance # 10443-16, West Washington <br />National Register <br />Rating: Outstanding <br />DESCRIPTION OF STRUCTURE/ SITE: <br />The Kizer House is part of the West Washington National Register Historic District. The house is in the <br />Romanesque Revival style with a full three stories and basement. The house is built of coursed gray <br />granite, which contributes to its style including heavy massing and round arches. The mortar is a red <br />color with a raised beaded or grapevine joint. There is a central hip roof with numerous intersecting <br />. gables and towers, a massive parapet at the west gable, two round towers on the fagade which terminate <br />into conical roofs. The original dormers feature a conical roof with terra cotta clad sidewalls and terra <br />cotta ridge cap. There are three dormers added c. 1940 with a low slope roof and copper sidewalls The <br />original roof was covered in square edge red clay tile — similar to that on Tippecanoe Place. The current <br />asphalt roof replaced the original tile (first in the 1980's, most recently renovated in 2017) retaining the <br />decorative terra cotta ridge cap. The roof was completed with a decorative copper cornice and gutters. <br />Elements of the copper flashing remain, although the original copper downspouts have been replaced with <br />galvanized metal and the valleys are asphalt. All entry steps are of cut granite with rough stone <br />balustrades. The front porches and porte-cochere have slender stone column supports. The front porch <br />has a shallow hip roof while the porte-cochere has a gable roof with a decorative terra cotta shingled <br />pediment. Windows around the house are 1/1 double hung wood windows throughout with stone sills, <br />plain jambs, and massive lintel stones. The Port Cochere was added at some point following the original <br />construction. A rear porch and kitchen wing has a matching addition assumed to be added at the time the <br />porte-cochere was also added. Three tall chimneys — two in the front and one in the rear — punctuate the <br />roofline. <br />The Carriage House in the rear of the property replaced an earlier wood frame barn c. 1915 to house <br />automobiles with an apartment above and a full basement in poured concrete. Original basement windows <br />have been replaced with new glass block. New wood carriage style doors were installed in 2015 along <br />with a new wood entry door. A new asphalt shingle roof was installed in 2015. The Carriage House is <br />constructed of hollow core clay tile block with a smooth faced red brick. The roof is a steep gabled roof <br />with asphalt shingles and a wide bracketed boxed eave, multi -lite 6/1 double hung wood windows. <br />The Site has been highly altered with a majority of the land being paved with concrete — the exception <br />being an area east of the driveway extending to the sidewalk on Charles Martin Black Boulevard which is <br />grass with scrub trees and decorative red -buds. A small area of grass is also located to the west of the <br />. carriage house. A brick wall extends from the west elevation of the carriage house along the north alley to <br />the neighbor's property line. A modern eight foot tall wood fence is constructed along the west property <br />12 <br />
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