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Feb. 28, 2022

C.9.1 - 1505 Alameda Dr - Plans original pdf

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GENERAL NOTES PROJECT INFORMATION ADDRESS: ADDRESS: 1505 ALAMEDA DRIVE AUSTIN, TX 78704 LEGAL DESCRIPTION: LEGAL DESCRIPTION: LOT 15 BLK5 TRAVIS HEIGHTS SF3 DESCRIPTION OF WORK: DESCRIPTION OF WORK: NEW CONSTRUCTION OF SINGLE FAMILY, 3-STORY HOUSE WITH ATTACHED CARPORT & IN-GROUND POOL OWNER: OWNER: ARCHITECT: ARCHITECT: BUILDER: BUILDER: LUCKY DAY'S CASA, LLC CONTACT: MATT SCHWALBE 1024 BONHAM TERRACE AUSTIN, TX 78704 MWSCHWALBE@GMAIL.COM FAB ARCHITECTURE, LLC. PATRICK OUSEY, ARCHITECT 405 CUMBERLAND RD AUSTIN, TX 78704 T (512) 469.0775 F (512) 469.0570 CONTACT: VICTORIA HARRINGTON VICTOIRA@FABARCHITECTURE.COM COBB DEVELOPMENT LLC VANCE COBB, CONTRACTOR 4608 CACTUS LANE AUSTIN, TX 78745 T (512) 550.2144 CONTACT: VANCE COBB VANCECOBB@GMAIL.COM SHEET INDEX ARCHITECTURAL ARCHITECTURAL TITLE, PROJECT INFORMATION, & SITE PLAN TREE PROTECTION & SITE STAGING PLAN TENT EXHIBIT FIRST FLOOR PLAN UPPER FLOOR PLANS REFLECTED CEILING PLANS EXTERIOR ELEVATIONS EXTERIOR ELEVATIONS & SECTIONS INTERIOR ELEVATIONS STRUCTURAL STRUCTURAL A0.1 A0.2 A0.3 A1.1 A1.2 A2.1 A3.1 A3.2 A5.1 S0 S1 S1.1 S2 S2.1 S3 S4 S5 S6 S6.1 S6.2 - - - - - - - - - - - APPLICABLE CODES 2021 2021 2021 INTERNATIONAL BUILDING CODE UNIFORM PLUMBING CODE NATIONAL ELECTRIC CODE GENERAL NOTES GENERAL NOTES - ALL WORK TO CONFORM TO AND MEET LOCAL MINIMUM CODES, ORDINANCES, RULES, REGULATIONS AND LAWS OF BUILDING OFFICIALS OR AUTHORITIES HAVING JURISDICTION. ALL WORK NECESSARY TO COMPLY WITH SUCH REQUIREMENTS SHALL BE PROVIDED BY THE CONTRACTOR. - CONTRACTOR IS RESPONSIBLE FOR LAYOUT OF PROJECT - REPORT ANY VARIATIONS BETWEEN ACTUAL SITE CONDITIONS AND INFORMATION SHOWN ON DRAWINGS TO ARCHITECT IN TIMELY MANNER. - GENERAL CONTRACTOR IS RESPONSIBLE FOR COORDINATION OF ALL STRUCTURAL REQUIREMENTS. - GENERAL CONTRACTOR TO CUT + PATCH FOR ALL TRADES UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. - DETAILS TO MATCH EXISTING CONDITIONS. EXCEPT AS NOTED. VERIFY AND REVIEW W/ ARCH. - GENERAL CONTRACTOR IS TO PROVIDE ALL BUILDING PERMITS + UTILITIES. EACH SUB CONTRACTOR TO PROVIDE PERMITS AND FEES REQUIRED FOR HIS TRADE AND ALL INSPECTIONS REQUIRED BY CODE. - GENERAL CONTRACTOR TO KEEP CONSTRUCTION SITE CLEAN + ORGANIAZED. - RELOCATE EXISTING UTILTIES AS REQUIRED (GAS, ELECTRIC, CABLE + TELEPHONE,) SEE SITE PLAN FOR NEW LOCATIONS. - ALL TRENCHING REQ'D FOR UTILITIES TO BE DONE W/ EXTREME CARE TO ENSURE PROTECTION OF TREE AND PLANTING ROOT SYSTEMS. WORK TO BE AROUND ROOTS, NOT THROUGH. - G.C. TO PROTECT ALL PLANTING BEDS, TREES, OVERHEAD BRANCHES AND LANDSCAPE, U.N.O.. REVIEW W/ OWER ALL AREAS WHERE ACCESS WILL BE NEEDED SO THAT OWNER CAN …

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C.9.a - 1505 Alameda Dr - 15 public comments combined original pdf

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From: To: Subject: Date: Donna Morrow PAZ Preservation 1505 Alameda Sunday, February 20, 2022 12:16:27 PM *** External Email - Exercise Caution *** Case # HR 22-006510-1505 ALAMEDA DR. ATTN: Amber Allen: This isn't a contributing historic structure. I hope the demo & new construction will be more in character with this recognized National Historic area. I do not object to the demo if trees are left intact & not damaged. Donna Morrow 504 Terrace Dr 78704 CAUTION: This email was received at the City of Austin, from an EXTERNAL source. Please use caution when clicking links or opening attachments. If you believe this to be a malicious and/or phishing email, please forward this email to cybersecurity@austintexas.gov. From: Cc: Subject: Date: Allen, Amber Objections, 2/28/2022 Monday, February 21, 2022 1:09:57 PM *** External Email - Exercise Caution *** Liaison, Chair and Vice Chair of the Landmark Preservation Commission, I reside within the Travis Heights Fairview Park National Historic District. These applicants are aware of the significance of the neighborhood and property or their cases would not be coming before the Historic Landmark Commission. I have been active in the neighborhood although I am not aware of the any of below applicants contacting or presenting to the membership of the South River City Citizens Neighborhood Association, the organization that supported the Travis Heights-Fairview Park National Historic District, or the Historic Preservation Committee that successfully applied for the designation. Until these properties are fully documented and archived at the Austin History Center, I object to the demolition of the following agenda items and cases in the Travis Heights-Fairview Historic District being heard by the Historic Landmarks Commission at the 2/28/2022 meeting: C.1. 804 Rutherford Place – Travis Heights – Fairview Park National Register District – DEMOLISH a contributing building and build new construction (postponed January 24, 2022) C.2. 512 E. Monroe Street – Travis Heights – Fairview Park National Register District – DEMOLISH a contributing house and build new construction (postponed January 24, 2022) C.8. 700 E. Monroe Street – Travis Heights – Fairview Park National Register District – DEMOLISH a contributing building and build new construction C.9. 1505 Alameda Drive - Travis Heights – Fairview Park National Register District – DEMOLISH a contributing building and build new construction C.10. 1803 Kenwood Avenue - Travis Heights – Fairview Park National Register District – DEMOLISH a contributing building and build new construction C.11. …

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C4.2 - 1410 Alameda - window specs original pdf

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D.1.1 - 102 E 46th St - Drawings & Photos original pdf

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D.2.0 - 301 W 6th St original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28, 2022 DA-2022-007262; GF-2022-017035 301 WEST 6TH STREET D.2 – 1 PROPOSAL ARCHITECTURE Demolish a ca. 1919 commercial building. RESEARCH The building at 301 W. 6th Street is a single-story brick warehouse with rhythmic fenestration, a corner entrance, and Art Deco cornice detailing. The The building at 301 West 6th Street was constructed around 1919, though the lot appears to have been in use as commercial and dwelling space since at least the 1890s, per Sanborn fire insurance maps and occupancy histories. Onorato Del Curto sold the corner lot at 6th and Lavaca to the San Antonio-based Riegler Ice Cream Company in 1919. It became a manufacturing and sales center, with plate-glass windows to display the state-of-the-art facility and enameled interior1 to pedestrian traffic. By the 1920s, the Austin Ice Cream Company had purchased the building as their Austin headquarters, manufacturing Violet Crown Ice Cream products. In 1926, a group of Temple investors with the Bell Ice Cream Company had purchased the company, though the building kept the Violet Crown name. By 1931, the expanding Bell Company planned to construct a new factory at 10th Street and Guadalupe,2 and the Roy Rather Refrigeration Company purchased 301 W. 6th Street. During the 1930s, after a brief stint at 201 W. 6th Street, Morris and Curtis Mosteller moved their seed business into the former factory.3 During the late 1930s and early 1940s, their advertising focused on the wartime Victory Garden effort, and Morris Mosteller dispensed regular planting advice as part of his role as garden committee chairman of the Chamber of Commerce.4 Throughout the historic period, the secondary building sharing a party wall with 301 W. 6th Street—known through the years as 502, 504, and 506 Lavaca Street—served a variety of business and industrial occupants, most notably the Lindsey Auto Electric Company. Lindsey Auto Electric remained at the Lavaca Street address for at least twenty years. PROPERTY EVALUATION Designation Criteria—Historic Landmark 1) The building is more than 50 years old. 2) The building appears to retain moderate to high integrity. Non-historic awnings have been removed. Brick painting may have occurred in the historic period. Though the windows have been replaced, they do not appear to have altered original openings. 3) Properties must meet two criteria for landmark designation (LDC §25-2-352). Staff has evaluated the property and determined that it may meet two criteria: "Bell …

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D.3.0 - 410 E 5th St original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28, 2022 DA-2022-012545; GF-2022-014670 AVENUE LOFTS 410 E. 5TH STREET D.3 – 1 PROPOSAL ARCHITECTURE Demolish a ca. 1928/1943 office building converted to condominiums. Art Moderne building with curved central entry between three- and four-story wings. The building is clad in stucco and has fixed, casement, and porthole windows. Horizontal sunshades extend along window headers. Balconies with pierced metal supports are on a side and rear elevation. RESEARCH The building at 410 E. 5th St. served as the headquarters of the Texas State Department of Health. According to the Handbook of Texas Online, this agency owes its origins to the need for quarantine in the 19th century. Successor departments with expanded missions were established by the state legislature in the early 20th century. The agency was reorganized and named the Texas State Department of Health in 1927.1 The building also historically housed the Pasteur Institute of Texas, organized in 1903 for the diagnosis and treatment of rabies. Originally part of the Austin Lunatic Asylum (now the Austin State Hospital), the institute was combined with other state laboratories into the Bureau of Laboratories in 1928, under the oversight of the State Health Department.2 The original portion of this building was constructed in 1928 to serve the Bureau of Laboratories and Pasteur Institute. An initial 1934 expansion was designed by Page Brothers.3 A larger 1943 expansion was dramatic enough to be termed a new building in newspaper coverage of the opening, which occurred on the 64th anniversary of the Texas State Department of Health. The project, which allowed the entire department to be housed in a single location for the first time, added a floor atop the original two-story brick building and constructed a three-story reinforced concrete wing to the west.4 Building permits indicate a fourth floor was added to the west wing in 1948, which was anticipated in the building’s design.5 The 1943 expansion was attributed to either Ernest V. Manning or John L. Scott of Shingle & Scott.6 Manning earned a degree in architecture from the University of Texas. He opened a practice in Fort Worth before returning to Austin. Manning worked as an architect for the Texas Highway Department and designed buildings in the Highway Department complex in Lufkin, Texas, as well as on the Austin State Supported Living Center campus.7 Around 1947, he moved to Houston and worked for architect …

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D.3.a - 410 E 5th St - public comment original pdf

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D.4.0 - 1906 Willow St original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28, 2022 PR-2022-013267; GF-2022-014636 1906 WILLOW STREET D.4 – 1 PROPOSAL Demolish a ca. 1916 house. ARCHITECTURE RESEARCH 1906 Willow Street is a one-story house with pyramidal roof, inset partial-width porch, and screened aluminum windows. It is clad in horizontal wood siding and features double front doors. The primary house at 1906 Willow Street was built between 1916 and 1920. Its first occupants were renters Peter and Esther Allidi, who later built a landmarked home on Balcones Dr.1 By 1920, long-term owners Robert and Lottie Webb had purchased the house. Robert Webb worked as a railway ticketing agent with the Missouri-Pacific Lines, and Lottie Webb worked in the laundry at the Texas Confederate Home and the Driskill Hotel. Mrs. Webb stayed in the home after her husband’s death, renting it out to her mother2 and son in the late 1940s and to various other short-term renters in the 1950s. By 1959, Soledad Guajardo3 had purchased the house, adding an accessory unit at the rear of the property. PROPERTY EVALUATION The 2016 East Austin Historic Resource Survey lists the property as contributing to a potential historic district. Designation Criteria—Historic Landmark 1) The building is more than 50 years old. 2) The building appears to retain high integrity. 3) Properties must meet two criteria for landmark designation (LDC §25-2-352). Staff has evaluated the property and determined that it does not meet two criteria: a. Architecture. The building displays modest National Folk influences. b. Historical association. The property does not appear to have significant historical associations. c. Archaeology. The property was not evaluated for its potential to yield significant data concerning the human history or prehistory of the region. d. Community value. The property does not appear to possess a unique location, physical characteristic, or significant feature that contributes to the character, image, or cultural identity of the city, the neighborhood, or a particular demographic group. e. Landscape feature. The property is not a significant natural or designed landscape with artistic, aesthetic, cultural, or historical value to the city. STAFF RECOMMENDATION Encourage rehabilitation and adaptive reuse, then relocation over demolition, but release the demolition permit upon completion of a City of Austin Documentation Package. 1 Zoning Change Review Sheet: C14H-2015-0147, Peter and Esther Allidi House. https://www.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=251601 2 “Obituary.” The Austin Statesman, Jun 11, 1940. 7. 3 Zoning Change Review Sheet: C14H-2013-0006, Eloy and Soledad Guajardo …

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D.5.0 - 6801 Burnet Rd original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28TH, 2022 PR-2022-005907; GF-2022-016715 6801 BURNET RD. D.5 – 1 PROPOSAL ARCHITECTURE RESEARCH Demolish a commercial (café) building built in the year 1968. This commercial building was built circa 1968 and is a single-story, wood-frame construction with red-painted brick masonry veneer with a mansard, asphalt roof. The patio area was later enclosed and retains an exterior tan stucco treatment with 8 large picture windows set at regular intervals across the Burnet Street facing façade. The building has been vacant since approx. 2018 and has graffiti on the façade and sides. The Frisco sign should be noted as part of the Burnet landscape since 1976. Location of the Frisco restaurant from 2008-2018. The Frisco’s closing in 2018 marked the end of an 86-year old legacy business initially opened by Harry Akin in 1932 at the corner of S. Congress and Riverside. Harry Akin was the first Texan and the first Southwesterner to hold the position of President of the National Restaurant Association. (1) Akin is highly respected and remembered for his civil rights advocacy practiced through his restaurant chain. Aiken’s businesses were among the first in Texas to desegregate; serving and hiring black people. He was also known for equal pay to minorities and women. His advocacy earned him a spot as a civil rights adviser to President Lyndon B. Johnson who was known to sneak in the back of the Night Hawk restaurant on S. Congress for a meal in the private dining room. Aiken was elected mayor in 1967 and assisted in the passage of laws prohibiting segregation in public places. (2) During this time the two biggest employers in the City of Austin were the University of Texas and the State of Texas, but The Night Hawk restaurant chain was also known as a top place to work. The businesses provided a higher standard of training, higher wages, and benefits like retirement options. Hoover Alexander, the founder of Austin legacy business Hoover’s Cooking, started as a busboy at the Night Hawk and credits the Night Hawk as where he “discovered his passion for food and where he learned the restaurant business from the ground up.” (3) In 1994, a partnership of former Frisco Shop long-term manager Lawrence Baker and the Aiken’s nephew, R. Harry Akin, purchased the Frisco Shop. The business changed hands again in 2008, when the Frisco moved …

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D.5.a - 6801 Burnet Rd - public comment original pdf

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Allen, Amber From: Sent: To: Subject: Attachments: Tyler Faust Wednesday, February 23, 2022 4:40 PM PAZ Preservation Regarding the 6801 Burnet Rd Demolition Permit Application -- Case Number PR-2022-005907 / GF 22-016715 image1.jpeg; image0.jpeg *** External Email - Exercise Caution *** Good afternoon, I'm reaching out in response to a Notice of Public Hearing for a demolition permit at 6801 Burnet Rd. I notice that the location in question, which the notice designates as potentially having historical significance, is already actively being demolished before the 2/28 hearing (photos attached, taken this afternoon from the Marq on Burnet parking garage). While I have no issue with repurposing that land and no intention of opposing anything, I am a bit concerned that this developer would demolish everything *before* the permit hearing. I'm not sure if these hearings are simply pro forma or not, but if a developer is cutting corners early on with permitting, it worries me about what they'll do when they actually start building ‐‐ and if anyone were to wish to speak against demolition at the permit hearing, there's no longer a building to speak about in the first place. Thanks, Tyler Faust 6701 Burnet Rd resident CAUTION: This email was received at the City of Austin, from an EXTERNAL source. Please use caution when clicking links or opening attachments. If you believe this to be a malicious and/or phishing email, please forward this email to cybersecurity@austintexas.gov. 1

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D.5.b - 6801 Burnet Rd - public comment original pdf

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Allen, Amber From: Sent: To: Subject: Wednesday, February 23, 2022 6:26 PM PAZ Preservation Case Number 22-016715 - 6801 Burnet Rd *** External Email ‐ Exercise Caution *** Good evening, I received a notice of public hearing letter regarding the property next to my apartment. As the notice regards a demolition, were y’all aware the property has been in the process of demolition since last week? Attached are photos taken today of the demolished land on 6801 Burnet Rd. CAUTION: This email was received at the City of Austin, from an EXTERNAL source. Please use caution when clicking links or opening attachments. If you believe this to be a malicious and/or phishing email, please forward this email to cybersecurity@austintexas.gov. 1 2 3 4 If this is known, then ignore this message. 5

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D.6.0 - 2012 E 16th St original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28TH, 2022 PR-2022-013252; GF-2022-016721 2012 EAST 16TH STREET D.6 – 1 Construct a two-story addition, covered patio, and deck to a ca. 1906-1908 single-story house. Remodel non-historic ADU. PROPOSAL PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS ARCHITECTURE RESEARCH 1) Demolish existing one-story addition. 2) Construct a two-story addition. The proposed addition is sited roughly 15 feet from the front porch wall of the house and 22 feet from the front gable wall, in the approximate location of the existing one-story addition. 3) Add a dormer to the existing house’s roof. 4) Open previously enclosed porch at the Alamo Street elevation. The house at 2012 E. 16th Street is a single-story L-plan Folk Victorian building with asbestos siding, scalloped shingles at the gable end, and 4:4 screened wood windows. Details include a stained-glass transom above the front door and chamfered posts supporting the partial-width porch. 2012 E. 16th Street was constructed around 1906 as a rental property. Its first occupants included saleswomen, laborers, railway workers, and clergymen. In the early 1920s, Walter J. and Lavina Jones purchased the home. Walter Jones, called Deacon, operated a restaurant on Leona Street before becoming manager and proprietor of a popular barbecue restaurant on E. 11th Street, Deacon Jones’ Place. Jones catered community events1 as well as operating a café, which he built in 1941.2 He was a member of the Austin-Travis County Humane Society and, after his retirement in 1955, served on the organization’s Special Donations Committee during fundraising efforts for an Austin animal shelter.3 Jones died in 1966.4 DESIGN STANDARDS The City of Austin’s Historic Design Standards (March 2021) are based on the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation and are used to evaluate projects at potential historic landmarks. The following standards apply to the proposed project: Repair and alterations 3. Roofs The proposed flat-roofed dormer is not appropriate. Residential additions 1. Location The proposed addition is located at the rear of house, roughly where the current one-story addition is sited. 2. Scale, massing, and height The proposed addition’s two-story height is mitigated by its significant setback; however, elevations for the primary street frontage were not provided, so its overall impact from E. 16th Street could not be determined. 3. Design and style The proposed addition’s design is somewhat complex, which may increase its visual impact, particularly at the Alamo Street 1 “Credit Women Have Barbecue on Lake Front,” …

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D.6.1 - 2012 E 16th St - photos-renderings original pdf

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Low Design Office, LLC <lowdo.net> USA: 2601A S 2nd St Austin, TX 78704 GHANA: 29 Palm St, Community 18, Tema 2012 E 16th Historic Review for a Partial Demolition (removing previous additions) Client: Date: Applicant: Sheer Nisman and Ryan O'Connor 21-February-2022 Ryan Bollom, AIA, Principal, Low Design Office Low Design Office has worked with Ryan and Sheer since December of 2020 to design a home addition that can accommodate their growing family (increasing the size of the house from 1580sf to 2520sf). Our collective design process and approach developed with a desire to preserve and enhance the beauty and character of the original house, built in 1905. The design also must respond to a contemporary metal clad garage apartment that was built by the previous owners in 2014. We feel the strongest and most efficient solution is to remove previous additions (which create odd interior spaces and problematic pass through rooms) and set the addition apart from the original house with a flat roof connector. This design solution clearly defines and highlights the original structure rather than blending the two together (as the previous addition does), and allows the addition to more freely respond to the needs of Ryan and Sheer while also bridging the difference between the original house and the garage apartment, which were constructed of vastly different materials, size, and scale. We look forward to an open conversation with the hopes of doing what is best for Ryan, Sheer, their family and their home. Sincerely, ___________________________ Ryan Bollom, AIA Low Design Office, LLC 2601A S 2nd St Austin, TX 78704 02/21/2022 _______________ Date ref: 20220228_OCO 1 of 1 INVOICE Invoice # : Invoice Date : Due Date : 201215_OCO 12/15/2020 Upon Receipt LOW DESIGN OFFICE 2601A S 2nd St Austin, TX 78704 www.lowdo.net 832 729 7962 CONTACT Ryan Bollom ryan@lowdo.net BILL TO Ryan O'Connor and Sheer Nisman Item Rate HRs Price Paid to date Existing Drawings Design Concepts Deliverable Production 90 130 90 11 7.75 3.75 $ 990.00 $ 1,007.50 $ 337.50 Subtotal 22.5 $ 2,335.00 Tax $ ‐ Amount Paid Total Paid to Date $ ‐ Total Due $ 2,335.00 thank you for your business ! please consider Low Design Office for your next project . FRONT VIEW FROM 16TH STREET EXISTING GARAGE APARTMENT BACK VIEW FROM ALLEY EXISTING VIEWS INVOICE Invoice # : Invoice Date : Due Date : 201215_OCO 12/15/2020 Upon Receipt LOW DESIGN …

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D.6.2 - 2012 E 16th St - plans original pdf

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D.7.0-1403 E Cesar Chavez original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28, 2022 PR-2022-014784; GF-2022-016729 1403 E CESAR CHAVEZ ST D.7 – 1 PROPOSAL ARCHITECTURE RESEARCH Demolish a single-family Craftsman-style residence built circa 1925. Single story residential construction with cross gable roofline built in the Craftsman style circa 1925. The roof has one triangular knee brace in the apex of each gable. The porch supports are composed of brick masonry piers with sloping sides. On top of the piers rest the decorative wooden support columns which appear to take cues from Orientalist design principles. The wooden porch railing is almost Stick in its patterned styling lending to the Western Stick reference known for some Craftsman styles. The structure has horizontal wood siding and the façade is comprised of a single entry door and two matching window assemblies, each comprised of two single hung, vertical, wood windows. From 1927 to 1959 this home was owned and occupied by members of the Balagia Family. Charles and Tofie Balagia were owners of the Balagia Produce Company. Co-owner Tofie Balagia and his wife Bertha purchased this house in 1927 and it became their family home. Bertha Balagia (Tofie’s widow) continued to live at this address into 1959. The Balagia Produce Company was already one of the oldest in the Austin area by 1939 and where many would go to order their holiday turkeys and meats and they held the State contract for providing meat to State institutions for many years. Balagia Produce continued to serve the City and surrounding areas becoming one of the largest suppliers of meat and produce in the State of Texas. PROPERTY EVALUATION The 2016 East Austin Survey report recommends that the property is eligible as a local landmark and contributes to a potential local historic district. Designation Criteria—Historic Landmark 1) The building is more than 50 years old. 2) The building appears to retain high integrity. 3) Properties must meet two criteria for landmark designation (LDC §25-2-352). Staff has evaluated the property and determined that it does meet two criteria: a. Architecture. The building is a good example of Craftsman-style architecture. b. Historical association. The property appears to have significant historical associations with Balagia Produce c. Archaeology. The property was not evaluated for its potential to yield significant data concerning the human history or prehistory of the region. d. Community value. The property does not possess a unique location, physical characteristic, or …

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D.7.1 -1403 E Cesar Chavez - site plan & photos original pdf

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LEGEND P=>c:> POWER POLE -E-- OVEHEAD ELEC./TELE. LINE --0--- CHAir~ LINK FENCE ---jf- WOO[ FENCE W 0 ELECTRIC METER GrA 0 GAS \ETER WMQ WATER rAETER IRF • 1 /2" IRON ROD FOUND IRFC • 1 /2" IRON ROO FOUND W/CAP STAMP':O "HOLT CARSON" IPf 0 1 /2" IRON PIPE FOUND PK3 • PK ~-AIL SET IN FENCE POST IRSo 1/2" IRON ROO SET W/CAP STAMPED "SNS" \ EAsr C.esAR CuA VEZ STREET (EAsr l£ir£R Sr.R££r PER PLAr) (60' ROW) LONC-~ & G CONC. DR loVE< E 0 BEARING BASIS 0 ° CONC \\IALK 58.41' --".__ -- ___ ____}V S66"48'04"E IRFC 58.38' LOT 1 •0 N ,.---- - roo ..---oci ~:= lL GM 09';1 < w (j) ~w 0 ' < og no N~ N Zz b ..,. <0 N ,o 0~\ -~ CONC. CURB\ , (TYP.) BRICK COL (TYP.) ] __ ; CONC. PORCH 34.0 • 4 < ." "\\. fj I -~~ ·1'1! X I r/'\ll IEP~ I I I \ 0 " ,..--__ Q_ >- 1- (L __j >- <( : : ) f- iE I- 8U "-' <( !:S'-.-/ os'j 18 . oro 0 OJ..- ..--- - N N "' SINGLE STORY WOOD FRAME WOOD SIDING - "' \_____ CONC. STEPS (TYP.) -,; 3 '_OT 3 (0 5: ~0 "''o 0 0 . Ot') ~N N lfllfJ 13.4 ¢ " " 18.3 ~\EM WOOD RAMP DECK/ o• ·~ " " ~.... .(j., I I I 0 soN~ ~L.AB • I 41 i '"! .. ., .(j A \ ~ \ LOT 2 BLOCK "I'' I ~0< ~Ls " " I /1 I i $ IRF S23"00' 49"W 18.03' ET N 67'00'00" W ET-----~-------~------trp;~~--------;_ ~ I N 6T02'27" w ~ 58.40;--~EDGE OF PAV~-~;;s:· WM n O ~· I WM A£££Y (18' ROW) ** SCAL~D FROM TAX MAP * CITY OF AUSTIN, BOOK 1, PAGE 28, PLAT RECORDS Survey No2 __ 11_8~4~---- SCALE! 1" ~ 20' -----'------ G' 20760030R!SE PLAT OF SURVEY Said lot is i~ Zone X as identified by the Federal Erre·gency Management Agency on Camm unity Panel No. -':4':'8c:'4,:::5:.::3:..::C::___::0::._4.:..:6::.:5:::_Kc:....._ ______ _ Dated JA."i_ 22, 2020 Ail co:ner-5 ore 1 ·Jtherw1se noted the C"Vners ot the prem1ses surveyed. iron rod found unless llell holders and/or 2 BLOCK NO. __ '_'7_" LJT NO. ADDITION JR SUBDIVISION WELCH SUBDIVISION OF OUTLOTS 34 AND 36, DIVISION "0", * STREET ADCRESS 1403 EAST CESAR CHAVEZ STREET CITY AUSTIN SCRVEY F<)R …

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D.7.a - 1403 E Cesar Chavez St - public comment original pdf

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D.7.b - 1403 E Cesar Chavez St - public comment original pdf

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D.8.0 - 1908 E. 17th St original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS FEBRUARY 28, 2022 PR-2022-015243; GF-2022-016744 1908 E. 17TH ST. D.8 – 1 PROPOSAL ARCHITECTURE Demolish a circa 1929 single-family dwelling. This residence is a single family, one-story, wood construction, pier and beam bungalow with front-facing low pitched nested gable design with flattened peaks and wide unenclosed eave overhangs. This eclectic residence has what appears to be horizontal vinyl siding with a masonry stone veneer façade. The façade is composed of a single entry door and 1 window assembly, composed of 2, vertical, 1:1, single hung, windows, and one, solo, single hung, vertical, 1:1 window for a total fenestration façade count of three windows. This residence seems to take a variety of style cues mostly from Craftsman and Minimal Traditional designs and is categorized as a bungalow. RESEARCH Water service permit dates the residence to May of 1927. The first owners listed in the City Directories are Arnold and Fannie Wells, who owned the property from 1932 to 1939. Arnold was employed as a butler, yardman & chauffeur for 900 W 17th St. Fannie was 27 years old when she was charged with the murder of her 32-year husband after shooting him in self-defense during a domestic dispute at this residence in 1938. Arnold died at Brackenridge hospital. The property was rented by several tenants from 1941 to 1944 and then purchased by Arthur B. and Josephine Sneed. Mr. Sneed is listed as a Foreman for the City’s Public Works Department and the couple lived at this address from at least 1947 till Ms. Sneed’s death in 1977. PROPERTY EVALUATION The Chestnut Neighborhood Survey (2000) and East Austin Survey (2016) list the property as a low priority and contributing to a potential Chestnut historic district, respectively. Designation Criteria—Historic Landmark 1) The building is more than 50 years old. 2) The building appears to retain low integrity. 3) Properties must meet two criteria for landmark designation (LDC §25-2-352). Staff has evaluated the property and determined that it does not meet two criteria: a. Architecture. The building does not appear to convey architectural significance. b. Historical association. The property does not appear to have significant historical associations. c. Archaeology. The property was not evaluated for its potential to yield significant data concerning the human history or prehistory of the region. d. Community value. The property does not possess a unique location, physical characteristic, or significant feature …

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D.8.1 - 1908 E 17th St - Photos original pdf

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1908 E 17th Attached are photos of the property located at 1908 E 17th taken in February 2022. The home is in very poor condition. It is not structurally sound due to a fire in the attic. In addition, there is mold present and large dead rats making it unhealthy to occupy. I am not sure when the fire happened, but sometime before our purchase as noted in attached listing. Page 1 of 5 1908 E 17th Page 2 of 5 1908 E 17th Page 3 of 5 1908 E 17th Page 4 of 5 1908 E 17th Page 5 of 5 Copyright - 2021 - ACTRIS©. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed and should be verified. ACTRIS provides content “AS IS,” without any warranty, express or implied. 1908 E 17th St, Austin, Texas 78702Listing ID: 3414510LP: $525,000CP: $565,000 Address:1908 E 17th StStd Status:C/LANDCity:Austin, Texas 78702List Price:$525,000County:TravisMLS Area:5PID:02090908110000Tax Blk:2Subdiv:Bremond Walter Jr ResubTax Lot:4Type:Single LotLegal:LOT 4 BLK 2 OLT 35 DIV B BREMOND WALTER JR RESUBSch Dist:AustinElem:CampbellMid or Jr:KealingHigh:McCallumAcres:0.141$/Acres:$4,007,092.20Lot Size:Lnd SqFt:6,142FEMA:NoETJ:NoGeneral InformationTopog:Mineral:NoneSoil:Endngrd:Hm Allow:Barns:Sheds:Bldr Rstrct:YesZoned:SF-3-NUGarages:Corrals:Arch Apprv:Comm:NoView:NoneLvstck:Srfc Wtr:NoBlk Shttl:Dst Metro:Horses:No/NoneStr Srfc:Dst Lt Rail:Fence:Lot Feat:Alley Access, Trees-Medium (20 Ft - 40 Ft)Comm Ftr:NoneRestrict:City Restrictions, Deed RestrictionsDocs Avail:None AvailableUtility InformationWater Src:PublicSewer: Public SewerUtilities:Above Ground, Cable Available, WaterConnectedFinancial InformationEst Tax:$8,780Act Tax:$5,930Tax Year:2021Tax Rate: 2.2267Possess:Pref Title Co: Capital Title Bobbie LockettRemarksDirections:From I35 head east on MLK Jr blvd for .4 miles. South on Chicon than East on 17th st, property on left.Remarks:Current house on property had a structural fire and is a total loss according to seller, DO NOT ENTER! Value is in the lot itsself zoned SF-3Sold Date: 01/14/2022Closed Price: $565,000

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