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July 27, 2020

A.1 - Organizational letter of support - additional original pdf

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July 14, 2020 Ms. Emily Reed, Chair and Historic Landmark Commissioners City of Austin Landmark Commission Historic Preservation Office Planning and Zoning Dept. P.O. Box 1088, Austin, Texas 78767 Dear Ms. Reed and Commissioners, Re: Rogers-Washington-Holy Cross District Preservation Application Please accept this letter of support for the Roger-Washington-Holy Cross Neighborhood Association (RWHC) Historic District Designation Application. As you may know the Austin History Center, Austin Public Library has long been a supporter of preserving communities and history, particularly in the East Austin sector of the City of Austin. The Rogers-Washington-Holy Cross neighborhood was identified in the East Austin Historic Resources Survey (2016) as a potential local historic district, eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. The history of the neighborhood tells a rich story of the development of East Austin in the Post-War and early years of the civil rights movement. Initially developed for the African American community veterans returning from serving their country in World War II, the addition of land owned by local Black physician, Dr. M. J. Washington, created space for custom designed homes for luminary figures within the community. It became home to Huston-Tillotson President, John Q. Taylor King, Oscar L. Thompson, the first African American graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and HT professor, Austin Public Library branch namesake Willie Mae Kirk; Principal of Kealing Jr. High School and 75th President of the Colored Teachers State Association, T.C. Calhoun; businesswoman Della Phillips, and other noted professionals. The architecture of the homes speaks to the time period; houses vary in style from John Chase’s two mid-century modern designs to handsome split-level and one-story ranch homes. Many of the current residents have lived in the neighborhood all their lives, bringing a pride of continuous ownership and history that is being lost in Austin. Austin is quickly losing much of the fabric that encases the history of the city. East Austin has been especially hard hit, losing historically and culturally significant places. It is important to recognize and preserve spaces like the Rogers-Washington-Holy Cross neighborhood, in order to exhibit a physical manifestation of our full American history, not just read a plaque about it. Again, I hope you will support the Rogers-Washington-Holy Cross neighborhood’s request which clearly meets the designation criteria established by code. I agree that its history is worth saving, and I support their efforts. Sincerely, kYmberly Keeton kYmberly Keeton, M.L.S., C.A. …

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July 27, 2020

B.1 - 1415 Lavaca Street_Applicant's presentation original pdf

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Backup

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July 27, 2020

B.1 - 1415 Lavaca Street_Comments from Preservation Austin original pdf

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Emily Reed, Chair City of Austin Historic Landmark Commission Re: Certificate of Appropriateness for Bartholomew-Robinson building at 1415 Lavaca Street Dear Chair, Preservation Austin respectfully requests that the Historic Landmark Commission deny the Certificate of Appropriateness for the Bartholomew-Robinson building at 1415 Lavaca Street. The owner’s Certificate of Appropriateness application shows the loss of all but the building’s exterior walls and construction of a tower within its historic footprint. We feel strongly that the project as presented does not meet the requirements of the City Code or the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards as they apply to this City of Austin Landmark property. Section 25-11-243 of the City Code states that when taking action on a Certificate of Appropriateness the Historic Landmark Commission, “shall consider the United States Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation, 36 Code of Federal Regulations Section 67.7(b).” The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards (SOI Standards) state the following: 2. The historic character of a property will be retained and preserved. The removal of distinctive materials or alteration of features, spaces and spatial relationships that characterize a property will be avoided. 9. New additions, exterior alterations, or related new construction shall not destroy historic materials that characterize the property. The new work shall be differentiated from the old and shall be compatible with the massing, size, scale, and architectural features to protect the historic integrity of the property and its environment. 10. New additions and adjacent or related new construction shall be undertaken in such a manner that if removed in the future, the essential form and integrity of the historic property and its environment would be unimpaired. “The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties with Guidelines for Preserving, Rehabilitating, Restoring & Reconstructing Historic Buildings” provides clarifying recommendations for applying the SOI Standards including constructing new additions that, (1) result in the least possible loss of historic materials; (2) are subordinate to the historic building; (3) are set back from the wall plane of the historic building; (4) are inconspicuous when viewed from surrounding streets; (5) are limited to one additional story in height; (6) appear as a separate building; (7) and do not negatively affect the building. The design presented to the HLC does not meet any of those clarifying guidelines. We appreciate that the needs of property owners change over time and understand that large towers will be constructed …

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July 27, 2020

B.2 - 2210 Windsor Road - Citizen Comments original pdf

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Gaudette, Angela From: Sent: To: Subject: Ben Bentzin < Monday, July 20, 2020 4:53 PM Gaudette, Angela Supporting plans for 2210 Windsor Rd > Follow Up Flag: Flag Status: Flag for follow up Flagged *** External Email - Exercise Caution *** To: City of Austin, Historic Landmark Commission Commissioners, I am writing in support of the proposed plans at 2210 Windsor. Having visited 2210 Windsor Rd many times over the past 20+ years I can attest to both the need for the proposed renovations and the benefit to our community in restoring this historically important home. Thank you. Ben Bentzin 2305 Windsor 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 CSIRT@austintexas.gov. 1 Gaudette, Angela From: Sent: To: Subject: Elena Goyanes < Tuesday, July 21, 2020 10:59 AM Gaudette, Angela Proposal for 2210 Windsor Road > Follow Up Flag: Flag Status: Flag for follow up Flagged *** External Email ‐ Exercise Caution *** I support the proposal for renovating, expanding, and updating 2210 Windsor Road. It is an historic home that deserves this careful update. Elena Goyanes 2307 Windsor Road, No. 1 Austin, Texas 78703 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 CSIRT@austintexas.gov. 1

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July 27, 2020

B.3 - 1406 Enfield Road - Changes to the back of the house original pdf

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KARTWHEEL STUDIO | 1406 e n f i e l d d r i v e 19 05 E 1 2t h Street, Au stin , TX PROJECT INFORMATION: CONTACTS: LOCATION: 1406 Enfield Road, Austin, TX 78703 PROJEC T DESCRIPTION: This project is the renovation of a single-family residence located in the Cit y of Austin at 1406 Enfield Road, 78703. The existing house is approximately 3,310 square feet with 2 stories and a basement. The design anticipates no addition of square footage. The project will consist of removing and reconfiguring interior walls, replacing interior finishes, adding millwork, and replacing /adding windows and a door on the rear- facing wall. The project is planned to compliment the current design aesthetic and materialit y of the existing house. The house is currently registered as a landmark by the cit y of Austin. APPLICANT: CARY DEVORE Email: cddevo@gmail.com DESIGN: K ART WHEEL STUDIO Contact: David Clark Email: david@kar t wheel.co Phone: 512- 820 -1518 SQUARE FOOTAGES: Lot Size - 13,114 SF Level 1 - 1,543 SF Level 2 - 1,543 SF Basement (Approx.) - 225 SF Building Total - 3,310 SF 22 1406 ENFIELD DRIVEKARTWHEEL STUDIO PHOTOS OF EXISTING BUILDING: FRONT-FACING REAR-FACING 33 1406 ENFIELD DRIVEKARTWHEEL STUDIO S I D E W A L K D A O R D L E I F N E K L A W E D I S EXISTING WALL 1 SITE PLAN OVERALL Scale: 1/16" = 1'-0" ALLEY 10' R.O.W PROPERTY LINE EXISTING WALL 570' NEW ELECTRICAL CABLE WITHIN THE PROPERTY TO BE TRENCHED UNDERGROUND (T.B.C.) NEW WALL SLIDING AUTOMOBILE GATE E N I L G D L B ' 0 3 DN BRICK PAVER laundry " 0 - ' 4 DN (2R) porte cochere D N foyer N R U T E R R A I dining kitchen WATER MULCH living E C A L P E R F I ELECTRICAL SPA " 0 - ' 3 1 DN GRAVEL sun room RAISED PLANTER DN 2R DN FIRE PIT AC CONC. PAD AC DN 2R 568' SUV SUV SUV SUV POOL EQUIPMENT 3.5' X 10' POOL 45' x 13' pool 50'-0" LAWN Q B B TV DINNING DN 1R DN 1R pool house MURPHY BED pool equipment K C A B T E S D R A Y R A E R ' 0 1 K C A B T E S D R …

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July 27, 2020

B.3 - 1406 Enfield Road - Landscape and pool improvements original pdf

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1406 ENFIELD ROADWORD + CARR DESIGN GROUPHLC PRESENTATION SUPPORT IMAGES SITE S URVEY HLC PresentationJuly 27, 2020 FULL CRZ 1/2 CRZ 1/4 CRZ LEGEND: FULL CRZ 1/2 CRZ 1/4 CRZ SPECIES * LIVE OAK LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK LIVE OAK LIVE OAK LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK SIZE 39.5" 20.5" 30" 30" 37.5" 18" 21.5" 22" 27" SPECIES * LIVE OAK LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK LIVE OAK LIVE OAK LIVE OAK * LIVE OAK T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 T8 T9 SIZE 39.5" 20.5" 30" 30" 37.5" 18" 21.5" 22" 27" NOTE: " * " REPRESENTS HERITAGE TREE. TREE NO. T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 T8 T9 NOTE: " * " REPRESENTS HERITAGE TREE. EXISTING TREE TO BE DEMOLISHED TREE NO. EXISTING TREE TO BE DEMOLISHED PROPOSED DEMOLITION 1 2 3 4 3 6 7 SINGLE STORY GARAGE BRICK DRIVEWAY W/ CONCRETE RUNNERS CONCRETE DRIVEWAY PARTIAL PERIMETER STONE WALL (3) STONE PLANTERS (14) STEPPING STONE AND STEPS TO THE HOUSE (KITCHEN) OVERHEAD ELECTRIC LINE TO THE HOUSE PROPOSED DEMOLITION 1 2 3 4 3 6 7 SINGLE STORY GARAGE BRICK DRIVEWAY W/ CONCRETE RUNNERS CONCRETE DRIVEWAY PARTIAL PERIMETER STONE WALL (3) STONE PLANTERS (14) STEPPING STONE AND STEPS TO THE HOUSE (KITCHEN) OVERHEAD ELECTRIC LINE TO THE HOUSE D A O R D L E I F N E D A O R D L E I F N E ALLEY 10' R.O.W PROPERTY LINE ALLEY 10' R.O.W PROPERTY LINE " 7 - ' 2 " 6 - ' 3 " 0 - ' 2 " 0 - ' 2 " 0 - ' 2 " 0 - ' 2 1 " 7 - ' 2 " 6 - ' 3 " 0 - ' 2 ' . 3 9 2 " 0 - ' 2 " 0 - ' 2 41.3' 41.3' RESIDENCE " 0 - ' 2 1 DN (4R) ' . 3 9 2 T1 DN (4R) T1 E N I L G D L B ' 0 3 E N I L G D L B ' 0 3 ' 0 1 5.3' ' 0 1 BRICK DRIVEWAY W/ CONCRETE RUNNERS EXISTING WALL STONE WALL O E E O E O OVERHEAD ELECTRIC LINE EXISTING WALL E O E O E O E O E O E O …

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July 27, 2020

B.3 - 1406 Enfield Road - REVISED Changes to the back of the house original pdf

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KARTWHEEL STUDIO | 1406 e n f i e l d d r i v e 19 05 E 1 2t h Street, Au stin , TX PROJECT INFORMATION: CONTACTS: LOCATION: 1406 Enfield Road, Austin, TX 78703 PROJEC T DESCRIPTION: This project is the renovation of a single-family residence located in the Cit y of Austin at 1406 Enfield Road, 78703. The existing house is approximately 3,310 square feet with 2 stories and a basement. The design anticipates no addition of square footage. The project will consist of removing and reconfiguring interior walls, replacing interior finishes, adding millwork, and replacing /adding windows and a door on the rear- facing wall. The project is planned to compliment the current design aesthetic and materialit y of the existing house. The house is currently registered as a landmark by the cit y of Austin. APPLICANT: CARY DEVORE Email: cddevo@gmail.com DESIGN: K ART WHEEL STUDIO Contact: David Clark Email: david@kar t wheel.co Phone: 512- 820 -1518 SQUARE FOOTAGES: Lot Size - 13,114 SF Level 1 - 1,543 SF Level 2 - 1,543 SF Basement (Approx.) - 225 SF Building Total - 3,310 SF 22 1406 ENFIELD DRIVEKARTWHEEL STUDIO PHOTOS OF EXISTING BUILDING: FRONT-FACING REAR-FACING 33 1406 ENFIELD DRIVEKARTWHEEL STUDIO S I D E W A L K ALLEY 10' R.O.W 570' 25'-0" PROPERTY LINE EXISTING AUTOMATIC DOUBLE LEAF GATE EXISTING WALL D A O R D L E I F N E K L A W E D I S NEW DRIVEWAY IN LOCATION OF EXISTING " 6 - ' 8 EXISTING FRONT ENTRY EXISTING PLANTING BED RESIDENCE 42'-0" EXISTING SELF CLOSING GATE EXISTING GRAVEL TO REMAIN T1 E N I L G D L B ' 0 3 EXISTING LAWN TO REMAIN " 3 - ' 2 1 AC AC ELECTRICAL PANEL PLANTING BED NEW ELECTRICAL METER SPA NEW CONCRETE POOL DECK NEW POOL 12'-0" FROM O.E. WATERLINE TO FINISH MULCH IN CRZ EXISTING GRAVEL TO REMAIN T2 EXISTING WALL T3 T4 568' T5 T6 EXISTING PERIMETER FENCE TO REMAIN 1 SITE PLAN OVERALL Scale: 1/16" = 1'-0" E O E O E O E O E O E O E O PEA GRAVEL 5' SIDE SETBACK O E O E EXISTING LAWN TO REMAIN O O E E O E O E O E O E O E O E O E O E O E O E O E O E …

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July 27, 2020

B.3 - 1406 Enfield Road - Staff Report original pdf

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H ISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS B.3 - 1 JU LY 27, 2020 C14H-2009-0058 G R AHAM-BYBEE RESIDENCE 1406 ENFIELD ROAD PR OPOSAL House: Remove and replace two sets of windows and the door on the back of the house; modify door and window openings. Yard: Demolish the detached garage and install a new back yard pool, remove stone wall along the alley; new concrete landscape paved areas in the back yard. PR OJECT SPECIFICATIONS The applicant proposes to: 1. Demolish the existing one-story, hipped-roof, board-and-batten detached garage that appears to be of historic age, but is not related stylistically to the house. 2. Remove the existing brick and concrete runner drive and replace it with a brick drive. 3. Remove stone walkways and steps and construct a concrete patio. 4. Install a new in-ground pool in the back yard. 5. Remove a historic-age stone wall at the alley side of the property. 6. Remove and replace two sets of windows and the door on the back of the house. The windows on the ground floor of the house will be replaced with a bi-fold set of windows that will open on a track rather than the double-hung windows currently in place; there is a double set of windows on the second story of the house that will be replaced with a smaller aluminum-clad window with stucco infill around the smaller opening to match the house. The proposed replacement door on the back of the house will be wood with wood sidelights. STA NDARDS FOR REVIEW The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation are used to evaluate projects on historic landmarks. The following standards apply to the proposed project: 1) A property will be used as it was historically or be given a new use that requires minimal change to its distinctive materials, features, spaces, and spatial relationships. Evaluation: The proposed project does not alter the residential use or character of the property. 2) The historic character of a property will be retained and preserved. The removal of distinctive materials or alteration of features, spaces, and spatial relationships that characterize a property will be avoided. Evaluation: The applicant proposes modifications to the rear of the house, including the removal and replacement of several windows and the back door. The proposed replacement window on the second floor will be smaller than the existing and will B.3 …

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July 27, 2020

B.4 - 8009 E. 9th Street - Project description original pdf

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Good Morning Steve and Cara, As you should know, GNDC has an affordable senior housing project in the works for the Lopez Property. We are at the point where the site plan can be approved, however, because the property has historic zoning, the site development permit cannot be issued until your office provides a certificate of appropriateness. We have until mid-August to get that done, but would love to have it sooner. We have made great efforts in the design process to maintain the structural and historic integrity of the Routon-Alvarez-Lopez House; stepping the tower away from the house (despite the incredible site constraints we face), removed balconies, reduced the size and minimized the visual impact of the hallway connecting the tower with the house. I joke with people that we should have started with the idea of of relocating to house to a site somewhere else and then, when that got shot down, moved to a design where we built over top of the house, and then, after that got shot down, proposed our initial design and it would have been hailed as wonderful. Instead, we tried to design as sensitively as possible from the start while being responsible to our mission of providing as much affordable housing as possible on a site with zoning and development entitlements that call for dense and tall buildings and prohibit the development of single-family structures. As you know, GNDC includes historic preservation as part of our mission, so the idea of demolition or relocation is something we would turn to only as a last resort. We're going through a Section 106 review and the Texas Historical Commission reviewed our initial designs (which were sent to you as early as January and again in March) and they made recommendations for changes which we then incorporated into the designs that I've attached. On May 27th, Lydia Woods-Boone,Program Coordinator for the Federal and State Review Program responded to the revised design as follows: Thank you for taking the time to change the design in order to more appropriately work with the historic structure. This design is greatly improved and seems to address all of our concerns. Please have the applicant resubmit the project with these designs through our eTRAC system so they can be formally reviewed under the Section 106 process. If there are any additional questions just let me know. Mr. Hatch, Thanks, Lydia …

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July 27, 2020

B.4 - 809 E. 9th Street - Staff Report original pdf

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H ISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS B.4 - 1 JU LY 27, 2020 C14H-2011-0002 ROU TON-ALVAREZ-LOPEZ HOUSE 809 E. 9TH STREET Construct a mid-rise residential tower adjacent to the house. PR OPOSAL PR OJECT SPECIFICATIONS The applicant proposes the construction of a mid-rise residential tower to provide affordable housing for seniors at the rear of the historic house. The proposed residential tower will be 9 stories (just over 112 feet) tall, with a slanted roof. The building will have stucco, glazed brick, and siding as its principal materials. There will be 6’-8” between the back wall of the house and the closest wall of the proposed building. The house will be used as a community room for the proposed new affordable housing project. STA NDARDS FOR REVIEW The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation are used to evaluate projects on historic landmarks. The following standards apply to the proposed project: 1) A property will be used as it was historically or be given a new use that requires minimal change to its distinctive materials, features, spaces, and spatial relationships. Evaluation: This project does not really affect the physical structure or the use of the existing house. It had a residential use historically, and is now being proposed as a community room for the adjacent residential project. 2) The historic character of a property will be retained and preserved. The removal of distinctive materials or alteration of features, spaces, and spatial relationships that characterize a property will be avoided. Evaluation: The house will not be affected by the construction of the adjacent building. No work is proposed for the historic house. The new building is over 6 feet from the back of the historic house; there will be an effect on the spatial relationships which currently exist on this property, but the general context of the neighborhood has changed dramatically over the past few years with the construction of adjacent apartment buildings. 3) Each property will be recognized as a physical record of its time, place, and use. Changes that create a false sense of historical development, such as adding conjectural features or elements from other historic properties, will not be undertaken. Evaluation: No work is proposed for the historic house. 4) Changes to a property that have acquired historic significance in their own right will be retained and preserved. Evaluation: N/A 5) Distinctive materials, features, …

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July 27, 2020

B.4 - 809 E. 9th Street - THC Coordination letter original pdf

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Hello Steve & Elizabeth, We received a No Adverse Effects determination from the Texas Historical Commission on Wednesday. See below. Tom Hatch addressed your question regarding the connection between the Lopez House and the new residential tower. I'm hoping between those two factors your office will be able to issue a certificate of appropriateness soon. I hope all is well with you. Mark Re: Project Review under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act and/or the Antiquities Code of Texas THC Tracking #202013678 La Vista de Lopez 809 E 9th Street Austin,TX 78702 Dear Dawn Perkins: Thank you for your submittal regarding the above-referenced project. This response represents the comments of the State Historic Preservation Officer, the Executive Director of the Texas Historical Commission (THC), pursuant to review under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act. The review staff, led by Charles Peveto and Lydia Woods, has completed its review and has made the following determinations based on the information submitted for review: Above-Ground Resources • Property/properties are eligible for listing or already listed in the National Register of Historic Places. • No adverse effects on historic properties. We have the following comments: The changes made to the design reflect the recommendations made by the THC in previous submission. Therefore, we have determined that this new design will have no adverse effect on the historic resource, La Vista de Lopez. We look forward to further consultation with your office and hope to maintain a partnership that will foster effective historic preservation. Thank you for your cooperation in this review process, and for your efforts to preserve the irreplaceable heritage of Texas. If the project changes, or if new historic properties are found, please contact the review staff. If you have any questions concerning our review or if we can be of further assistance, please email the following reviewers: charles.peveto@thc.texas.gov, lydia.woods@thc.texas.gov. This response has been sent through the electronic THC review and compliance system (eTRAC). Submitting your project via eTRAC eliminates mailing delays and allows you to check the status of the review, receive an electronic response, and generate reports on your submissions. For more information, visit http://thc.texas.gov/etrac-system. Sincerely, for Mark Wolfe, State Historic Preservation Officer Executive Director, Texas Historical Commission Thanks, Mark -- Mark C. Rogers, Executive Director Guadalupe Neighborhood Development Corporation 813 East 8th Street, Austin Texas 78702 512-479-6275 ext. 6

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B.4 - 8090 E. 9th Street - PLANS original pdf

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SIDEWALK SIDEWALK P A D T R A N S F O R M E R I E X S T N G I 1 0 4 1 0 3 1 0 1 A M E N T Y I D D D W W W I S D E W A L K U P U P SLOPE 1:12 N O T F O R R E G U L A T O R Y A P P R O V A L, P E R MITTIN G O R C O N S T R U C TIO N FOR CITY OF AUSTIN USE SITE PLAN SCALE: 3/32" = 1' -0" hatch + ulland owen a r c h i t e c t s 1010 East 11th Street Austin, Texas 78702 T: 512.474.8548 F: 512.474.8643 www.huoarchitects.com Civil Engineer: Civilitude LLC 5110 Lancaster Ct Austin, TX 78723 512.761.6161 Structural Engineer: TDI Engineering 5906 Old Fredericksburg Rd. Ste. 300 Austin, Tx 78749 512.301.3389 Mechanical, Electrical, and Plumbing Engineer: Aptus Engineering LLC 1919 South 1st St. Building B, Austin TX 78704 512.852.5059 Z E P O L E D A T S V A L I 2 0 7 8 7 X T , N I T S U A T E E R T S H T 9 T S A E 9 0 8 hatch + ulland owen a r c h i t e c t s 1010 East 11th Street Austin, Texas 78702 T: 512.474.8548 F: 512.474.8643 www.huoarchitects.com Civil Engineer: Civilitude LLC 5110 Lancaster Ct Austin, TX 78723 512.761.6161 Structural Engineer: TDI Engineering 5906 Old Fredericksburg Rd. Ste. 300 Austin, Tx 78749 512.301.3389 Mechanical, Electrical, and Plumbing Engineer: Aptus Engineering LLC 1919 South 1st St. Building B, Austin TX 78704 512.852.5059 Z E P O L E D A T S V A L I 2 0 7 8 7 X T , N I T S U A T E E R T S H T 9 T S A E 9 0 8 N O T F O R R E G U L A T O R Y A P P R O V A L, P E R MITTIN G O R C O N ST R U C TIO N FOR CITY OF AUSTIN USE 8- YARD DUMPSTER 8- YARD DUMPSTER (TRASH) (RECYCLE) A AMENITY W W W D D D …

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B.6 - GF-2020-098312 - 506 Barton Blvd - The UMLAUF original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS B.6 - 1 JULY 27, 2020 THE UMLAUF 506 BARTON BOULEVARD GF-2020-098312 PROPOSAL This application is pursuant to a Heritage Grant application to replace the roof in-kind, repoint brick, and repair roof framing in a rear area. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS The project has three parts: 1) Replace the existing roof with 3-tab asphalt shingles and standing-seam metal. This is an in-kind replacement. 2) Repoint the brick cladding with hydraulic cement where cracks evidence a foundation shift. The mortar will not match existing; the applicant states that cement must be used to prevent water infiltration. 3) Close underpinning with chopped limestone to prevent animal entry; work will match existing. 4) Reframe the rear (north) laundry area: replace rotted roof joists, tongue and groove decking, and fascia. No changes will be made to exterior walls. STANDARDS FOR REVIEW The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation are used to evaluate projects on historic landmarks and to any other properties receiving Hotel Occupancy Tax funding through a Heritage Grant. The following standards apply to the proposed project: 6) Deteriorated historic features will be repaired rather than replaced. Where the severity of deterioration requires replacement of a distinctive feature, the new feature will match the old in design, color, texture, and, where possible, materials. Replacement of missing features will be substantiated by documentary and physical evidence. The roof and pointing are in-kind work that will match existing materials. The project meets this standard. 7) Chemical or physical treatments, if appropriate, will be undertaken using the gentlest means possible. Treatments that cause damage to historic materials will not be used. Hydraulic cement will be used for repointing. The applicant is consulting with historic preservation professionals at the City’s Parks and Recreation Department to ensure that treatments will not damage historic materials, and the department will have a representative on-site during the repairs. The project meets this standard. The project meets this standard. COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS Not reviewed. STAFF RECOMMENDATION Approve the project, except for the mortar; authorize staff to review and administratively approve the mortar type.

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July 27, 2020

B.6 - The UMLAUF - Application and photos original pdf

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UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing shingles: southeast slope UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing shingle roof – west slope UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing shingle roof – south and eastern slopes UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Metal roof, west slope with flashing and limestone UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing metal roof – north slope UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing metal roof – rusted vents and flashing UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing metal roof – rusted vents and flashing UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/ repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing shingle roofing South slopes and ridge UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Existing shingle ridge UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair 506 Barton Blvd Austin TX 78704 Underside of rotten eaves UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair – back porch UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/ repair – back porch viewed from east UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/repair – back porch dilapidation UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 – Hole under porch UMLAUF – Heritage Grant 2018 Roof replacement/ repair – Cracks in limestone

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B.7 - Aldridge Place Historic District sign toppers - Hyde Park Topper Approval (2012) original pdf

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Hyde Park Topper Approval Minutes from November 26, 2012 Staff report HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION NOVEMBER 26, 2012 CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS LHD-2012-0034 Sign Toppers Hyde Park Local Historic District PROPOSAL Fabricate and install five "sign toppers" identifying the Hyde Park Local Historic District. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS Proposal calls for the fabrication and installation of signs identifying the Hyde Park Local Historic District. The signs will be funded by the Hyde Park Neighborhood Association (HPNA) and will be installed by the City's Transportation Department on top of existing street signs at the following intersections: Southeast corner of W. 40th Street and Avenue B with the sign parallel to Avenue B. Northeast corner of e. 44th Street and Avenue G with the sign parallel to Avenue G. Northeast corner of E. 39th Street and Avenue G with the sign parallel to E. 39th St. Northeast corner of E. 43rd Street and Avenue F with the sign parallel to Avenue F Northeast corner of W. 44th Street and Avenue B with the sign parallel to Avenue B The approximately 9" x 24" signs will be fabricated of aluminum with black background with white/silver reflective graphics and text. The HPNA has requested that the design include the City of Austin seal, name of the district, the date Hyde Park neighborhood was established, and the date the Local Historic District was established. The intent is for the approved design to become the standard template for signage in all City of Austin local historic districts, and that sign toppers only be allowed for Local Historic Districts. Funding for additional signs in the Hyde Park Local Historic District and in other districts is not currently available. STANDARDS FOR REVIEW The Hyde Park Local Historic District Goals and Design Standards do not specifically provide guidance for this type of street sign, however the signs as proposed do not adversely impact the historic character or integrity of the district or streetscape. Additionally, by identifying the historic district, they provide important recognition of the efforts of residents to establish the LHD, as well as identify the zoning classification for residents and visitors. Historic Preservation Office staff met with representatives of the Harthan Street Local Historic District and Castle Hill Local Historic District, as well as residents from neighborhoods interested in pursuing LHD zoning, to obtain feedback on the proposed design. Most people expressed the opinion that including dates for both the establishment …

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B.7 - Aldridge Place Sign Topper Locations original pdf

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Aldridge Place Historic District Sign Topper Locations

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B.7 - HR-2020-109100 - Aldridge Place sign toppers original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION JULY 27, 2020 APPLICATION FOR A HISTORIC SIGN PERMIT HR-2020-109100 MULTIPLE LOCATIONS ALDRIDGE PLACE HISTORIC DISTRICT B.7 - 1 PROPOSAL Fabricate and install 19 sign toppers identifying the Aldridge Place Historic District. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS The proposed signs will be identical in material, color, dimensions, and design to the Hyde Park Historic District signs installed circa 2012, but for the district name. The Commission approved the Hyde Park signs in November 2012 with the intent of the approved design to become the standard template for signage in all locally designated historic districts. COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS STANDARDS FOR REVIEW Not reviewed. STAFF RECOMMENDATION Approve the signs.

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C.1 - NRD-2020-0004 - 92 Rainey St.pdf original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION PERMITS IN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICTS C.1 - 1 JULY 27, 2020 NRD-2020-0004 92 RAINEY STREET RAINEY STREET NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICT PROPOSAL Demolish a ca. 1911-12 contributing bungalow and construct a new high-rise tower in its place. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS 1) Demolish existing contributing building. 2) Construct new 53-floor, 606’ tower, occupying two adjacent lots at 90 (now Container Bar) and 92 Rainey Street. The tower includes: a) Below-ground garage b) Commercial space (first and second floors plus third-floor bar area): i. Materials throughout include a transparent glass curtainwall system with metal mullions; simplified pilasters of textured stone at bay divisions; recessed mural panels with overhead lighting, and textured concrete cladding. Flat metal awnings above each tenant entrance at 1 and 1.5 stories are topped with lit signage. ii. At the east elevation, vertically-articulated panel systems of varying widths define tenant spaces. A metal shipping container with viewport projects from recessed bar space at the second floor, hovering above the streetscape. An angled precast concrete panel projects through both recessed bar spaces. c) Hotel and residential spaces: i. The tower is clad in a reflective glass curtainwall system throughout, with precast concrete accent panels on secondary facades. ii. Levels 8-52 are set back from the lower section of the tower (at roughly 177’). iii. After level 24, which separates the hotel units from residences and short-term rental units, glass balconies project from the north and south elevations. d) Roof deck RESEARCH The house at 92 Rainey Street was built around 1911. Its first owner was farrier Alonzo B. Cook, who ran a shop on Congress Avenue. From 1914 to 1920, the house had several short-term occupants, including a painter, a grocer, and a night watchman. By 1920, it had been purchased by Emil and Edith Bohls. Emil Bohls owned a restaurant in 1920, but he soon opened an auto paint shop on 5th Street. By 1937, as Austin’s automobile culture continued to grow, Bohls had expanded his repertoire to include a tourist camp and filling station on South Congress Avenue. By 1939, the Bohls family sold the home to Charles B. and Pearl Eustace. The Eustace family had lived across the street at 95 Rainey since 1922. Charles had recently retired from the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company after a 39-year tenure. As one of the earliest telephone employees in Austin, he was an active member of the …

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C.1.1 - NRD-2020-0004_92RaineyApplicantPhotos.pdf original pdf

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- 90.92 RAINEY STREET Austin, TX 0 2 0 2 Y R A U N A J . M O C S R E N T R A P N E S L E N dwg. AUSTIN, TX | 318222 | JANUARY 10, 20209092 Rainey© Nelsen Partners, Inc. 2020dwg. EAST ELEVATION EAST ELEVATION SOUTH ELEVATION SOUTH ELEVATION 92 RAINEY - BUNGALOW BAR AUSTIN, TX | 318222 | JANUARY 10, 20209092 Rainey© Nelsen Partners, Inc. 2020dwg. WEST ELEVATION NORTH ELEVATION AUSTIN, TX | 318222 | JANUARY 10, 20209092 Rainey© Nelsen Partners, Inc. 2020dwg. BUNGALOW BAR- UNDER CONSTRUCTION CERCA 2010-2011 AUSTIN, TX | 318222 | JANUARY 10, 20209092 Rainey© Nelsen Partners, Inc. 2020dwg. EAST ELEVATION SOUTH ELEVATION WEST ELEVATION NORTH ELEVATION 90 RAINEY - CONTAINER BAR AUSTIN, TX | 318222 | JANUARY 10, 20209092 Rainey© Nelsen Partners, Inc. 2020dwg.

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C.1.3 - NRD-2020-0004_92Rainey_2010alterations.pdf original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION PERMITS IN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICTS NRD-2010-0125 PROPOSAL 92 Rainey Street C.3. - 1 NOVEMBER 15, 2010 Rainey Street Modifications to the north, west, and south facades of the house; construction of a new walk-in cooler on the north side of the house, a wraparound deck on the south and west sides, a new separate restroom building in back of the house, installation of a steel trellis on the back of the house, and replacement of the composition shingle roof with a metal roof. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS The applicant proposes modifications to the exterior of the house to accommodate a walk-in cooler on the north side and a wood deck wrapping around the south and west sides, and the construction of a separate building behind the house for restrooms, storage, and an outdoor bar area. The front of the house will see the fewest modifications: only a deteriorating plaster porch pier and porch railing will be removed. On the north wall, the existing wood windows will be removed to accommodate the addition of the walk-in cooler, which will have wood siding and a flat roof. On the south wall, the existing wood-sided infill with a vinyl window will be removed and be replaced with a door and a steel-framed fixed sash window. On the west (rear) wall, the existing back door and window will be removed, as will the wood-sided infill that wraps around from the south side of the house. The infill section will have the wraparound of the steel-framed fixed sash window from the south side of the building. A new deck will surround the house on the south and west sides, and provide access to a new structure in the back yard, housing restrooms and storage. The existing composition shingle roof on the house will be replaced with a metal roof. STAFF COMMENTS STAFF RECOMMENDATION The ca. 1927 bungalow is contributing to the Rainey Street National Register Historic District. Release the building permit after completion of a City of Austin Documentation Package consisting of photographs of all four elevations and a measured sketch plan to record existing conditions and for archiving at the Austin History Center. Staff requests that the applicant reconsider the installation of the steel-framed glass at the rear of the building in favor of an architectural feature more compatible with the Craftsman detailing of the house. Overall, the appearance of the house …

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C.2 - NRD-2020-0025_2338 Columbus Dr.pdf original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION PERMITS IN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICTS JULY 27, 2020 NRD-2020-0025 2338 COLUMBUS DRIVE C.2 - 1 ZILKER PARK NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICT PROPOSAL Construct a new maintenance barn, pole barns, pond, and associated support structures. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS 1) Construction of a maintenance barn. The proposed barn will be clad in prefinished corrugated metal panels. Flat prefinished metal canopies will shade windows and entrances, and an irregular, angled metal shed roofline extends over bay doors at the south and east elevations. Rectangular fixed-pane windows are arranged in a regular pattern at south and west elevations, while a single horizontal window appears on the east façade. 2) Construction of two shed-roofed pole barns. 3) Construction of a biofiltration pond. 4) Construction of a staff parking lot. 5) Construction of a chemical storage building and rainwater tanks. The storage building will be constructed of split-face concrete masonry units, with a metal shed roof. 6) Construction of a security fence. STANDARDS FOR REVIEW The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation are used to evaluate new construction projects in National Register historic districts. Applicable standards include: 2. The historic character of a property shall be retained and preserved. The removal of historic materials or alteration of features and spaces that characterize a property shall be avoided. No historic buildings, structures, or significant landscape features will be removed. 9. New additions, exterior alterations, or related new construction shall not destroy historic materials that characterize the property. The new work shall be differentiated from the old and shall be compatible with the massing, size, scale, and architectural features to protect the historic integrity of the property and its environment. The proposed new building is differentiated from historic park structures in its siting, materials, and form. While its massing, cladding, and roofline are at odds with the rustic setting and character-defining features of historic park buildings, it does not appear to be entirely visible from Columbus Drive, and will not be accessible to the public. The pole barns and other support structures are sited far back from the road and should not be visible from the street. Significant tree cover in this area will also shield the new construction from view of other areas of the park. 10. New additions and adjacent or related new construction shall be undertaken in such a manner that if removed in the future, the essential form and integrity …

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C.2.1 - NRD-2020-0025_2338 Columbus_Zilker application.pdf original pdf

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June 15, 2020 Project Description  The Parks and Recreation Department’s (PARD) existing maintenance barn is undersized for Zilker Park maintenance staff’s current needs. The barn is also located within the Barton Creek Watershed, very near Barton Springs Pool.  The maintenance barn staff is responsible to maintain the entire Zilker Park including the pool, grounds and buildings.  The new maintenance barn will be located within the Eanes Creek Watershed, in a less-trafficked area of Zilker Park and will consist of more office space, work space, and storage space.  The building is expected to achieve LEED Silver. Project Location Project Location with Aerial Site Plan  1,780 SF office space  2,548 SF maintenance bay  2 pole barns for storage  Biofiltration pond for stormwater quality  Parking for staff  Vegetative Filter Strips  Rainwater collection and solar power in progress Site Views Landscaping Plan Trees removed to accommodate the construction of the facility will be replaced at rates indicated by the Environmental Criteria Manual. No heritage trees will be removed. Building Perspective View Building Floor Plan Building Exterior Elevations South View North View Pre finished Metal Wall PanelsPre finished Metal CanopyPre finished Metal Wall Panels Building Exterior Elevations West View, front door East View Pre finished Metal Wall PanelsPre finished Metal CanopySplit Face CMUPre finished Metal Wall PanelsSplit Face CMU Sustainable Construction and Design  Bicycle racks and showers for PARD staff  Occupant-controlled lighting  Stormwater quality protected with  Ample daylight in the office space biofiltration pond  Electric vehicle charging station  During construction, use products with recycled content and regional sourcing  Native and non-invasive adapted,  FSC-certified wood drought-tolerant landscaping  High-reflectance roofing  Using concrete as a Heat Island Reduction instead of asphalt  Indoor and outdoor water use reduction  Improved energy performance  Recycling collection  Low-emitting materials, including paint, adhesives/sealants/coatings, and flooring systems  Dark-sky compliant outdoor light fixtures or salvaged  75% of construction waste to be recycled

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C.3 - NRD-2020-0027_2607 McCallum Dr.pdf original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION PERMITS IN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICTS JULY 27, 2020 NRD-2020-0027 2607 MCCALLUM DRIVE OLD WEST AUSTIN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICT C.3 - 1 PROPOSAL Demolish a ca. 1941 contributing house. RESEARCH The house at 2607 McCallum Drive was built for Joseph McElroy Alexander, an office supply salesman with the Steck Company, and his wife Mildred. The Alexanders and their children lived in the home until at least 1952; by 1955, it had been sold to oilman Robert M. Payne and his wife Mary J. Payne, a dedicated United Fund volunteer. STAFF COMMENTS The house contributes to the Old West Austin National Register Historic District. New construction plans will require Historic Landmark Commission review when submitted. Designation Criteria—Historic Landmark 1) The building is more than 50 years old. 2) The building appears to retain moderate integrity, with modifications completed during the historic period. 3) Properties must meet two historic designation criteria for landmark designation (LDC §25-2- 352). The property may demonstrate significance according to City Code: a. Architecture. The house is constructed with Monterrey-style influences. b. Historical association. There do not appear to be significant historical associations. c. Archaeology. The house was not evaluated for its potential to yield significant data concerning the human history or prehistory of the region. d. Community value. The house does not 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 Comment on and release the permit upon completion of a City of Austin Documentation Package, consisting of photographs of all elevations, a dimensioned sketch plan, and a narrative history, for archiving at the Austin History Center. Alternately, the Commission may choose to initiate a 180-day demolition delay, as the building contributes to a National Register Historic District. LOCATION MAP C.1 - 2 PROPERTY INFORMATION Photos C.1 - 3 Source: Google Street View C.1 - 4 Occupancy History City Directory Research, July 2020 Note: Due to facility closure, post-1959 directory research is unavailable. 1959 1955 1952 1949 1947 Robert M. and Mary J. Payne, owners Independent oil operator Robert M. Payne, owner Joseph M. and Mildred Alexander, owners Salesman, Steck Co. Joseph M. and Mildred Alexander, owners Salesman, Steck …

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C.4 - 1404 Hardouin - Existing plans and photos original pdf

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Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. Site Plan Scale 1:20 NEW FIRST FLOOR PORCH ROOF SLOPE (VERIFY) 2 : 12 METAL 2 : 12 SLOPE METAL NEW ROOF 6 : 12 SLOPE ASPHALT SHINGLE BALCONY (UNCOVERED) SLOPE (VERIFY) 2 : 12 METAL NEW ROOF 2 1 : 4 E P O L S 2 1 : 4 E P O L S 2 1 : 4 E P O L S 4 : 12 SLOPE 4 : 12 SLOPE ASPHALT SHINGLE 4 : 12 SLOPE ASPHALT SHINGLE 2 1 : 6 E P O L S ASPHALT SHINGLE 2 1 : 6 E P O L S 2 1 : 6 E P O L S 6 : 12 SLOPE ASPHALT SHINGLE NEW CHIMNEY ASPHALT SHINGLE ASPHALT SHINGLE 2 1 : 6 E P O L S Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. Roof Plan Scale: 1/8"=1'-0" 07.15.20 VERIFY 12 6 ASPHALT SHINGLE ROOF SECOND FLOOR CLG. " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. METAL AWNING NEW BRICK STONE WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. WOOD VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 4 NEW BRICK BRICK STEEL OR WOOD CLAD WINDOW Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. South Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 4 VERIFY 12 4 " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 SECOND FLOOR CLG. SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. East Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" VERIFY 12 4 WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. STEEL OR WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. VERIFY 12 4 VERIFY 12 6 ASPHALT SHINGLE ROOF METAL ROOF SECOND FLOOR CLG. METAL RAIL NEW BRICK NEW BRICK METAL ROOF SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. METAL AWNING " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. North Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" ASPHALT SHINGLE ROOF VERIFY 12 …

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C.4 - 1404 Hardouin - Proposed plans original pdf

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Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. Site Plan Scale 1:20 VERIFY 12 6 ASPHALT SHINGLE ROOF SECOND FLOOR CLG. SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. NEW BRICK STONE WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 4 NEW BRICK BRICK STEEL OR WOOD CLAD WINDOW " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. South Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 4 VERIFY 12 4 " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 SECOND FLOOR CLG. SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. East Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" VERIFY 12 4 WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. STEEL OR WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. VERIFY 12 4 VERIFY 12 6 ASPHALT SHINGLE ROOF METAL ROOF SECOND FLOOR CLG. METAL RAIL NEW BRICK NEW BRICK METAL ROOF SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. North Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" VERIFY 12 4 VERIFY 12 2 METAL ROOF ASPHALT SHINGLE ROOF VERIFY 12 6 VERIFY 12 6 SECOND FLOOR CLG. STUCCO STUCCO NEW BRICK WOOD CLAD WINDOW. TYP. SECOND FLOOR F.F.E. FIRST FLOOR CLG. " 1 1 - ' 8 " 1 1 " 0 - ' 9 FIRST FLOOR F.F.E. VERIFY NUMBER OF STEPS Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. West Elevation Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" South / Front North East West Architecture 1408 Ethridge Ave / Austin, Texas 78703 1404 Hardouin Ave Not for regulatory appproval, permitting, or construction. A.12 Garage Scale: 1 8"=1'-0" 11.05.18

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C.4 - 1404 Hardouin Ave - Changes and comparable original pdf

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C.4 – 1404 Hardouin Ave Information provided by applicant Potential comparable property  There is a duplex on the same street at 1506 Hardouin. It has both doors together on left side. 1404 may have been the same way.  Note the first floor central window does not align with window above. I am wondering if when the 1404 window was removed for the entry update, if it may not have aligned and have been shifted as well.  1404 front windows are not centered on the house - possibly because of left entrance location.  This 1506 Hardouin duplex also is simple in its detail. No shutters or colonial revival features that I think were added to 1404. C.4 – 1404 Hardouin Ave Information provided by applicant Area of Existing Alterations to South Elevation  Alterations transition façade from duplex with simple detail and two front entrances to a house with more traditional detail and central formalized entrance.  Second entry was on the left side of the elevation behind the tall plant.  Circle drive, brick sidewalk and front yard fence are not original C.4 – 1404 Hardouin Ave Information provided by applicant  Fanlight over front door and front door do not appear to be original. Top of fanlight runs into crown molding.  Fanlight over window may have been added. Window sills in front rooms of the house are different heights – originally they were probably the same heights. C.4 – 1404 Hardouin Ave Information provided by applicant Clean line of concrete east (right) of entry Uneven line of patched / parged concrete west (left) of entry where second entry removed C.4 – 1404 Hardouin Ave Information provided by applicant Front porch appears to have been added at a later date. Brick detail on porch matches brick sidewalk next to circle drive that is not original. C.4 – 1404 Hardouin Ave Information provided by applicant Landscape coverage of brick patch where second entry door was removed. Uneven brick over where fanlight added.

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C.4 - HR-2020-084996 - 1404 Hardouin Ave original pdf

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C.4 - 1 HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION JULY 27, 2020 PERMITS IN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICTS HR-2020-084996 1404 HARDOUIN AVENUE OLD WEST AUSTIN NATIONAL REGISTER DISTRICT PROPOSAL Alter window and door openings; replace windows, door, and brick cladding; construct rear additions and carport awning; and replace the existing detached garage with a new 2-story garage. ARCHITECTURE 2-story irregular-plan house with Classical Revival influences, brick cladding, 1-over-1 wood-sash windows, and a central chimney. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS The proposed project includes ten parts: 1) Alter window openings to narrow, vertically oriented single windows spaced evenly across the primary (south) façade. Window openings on the rest of the house will be altered as well to new vertically oriented dimensions. One window opening will be added to the east elevation of the 1997 addition. 2) Alter the front door opening to be recessed by 2’, with sidelights and a stone surround. 3) Replace windows with casement multi-lite clad-wood windows on the front and side elevations and casement steel-sash windows on the rear elevation. 4) Replace door with a paneled wood door with multi-lite clad-wood sidelights. 5) Remove brick to insulate the house; replace with new brick. 6) Construct a new chimney on the east elevation. 7) Replace the roof material in-kind. 8) Construct a metal awning at the rear of the left side (west) elevation. The awning will be gently sloped and supported by metal cables attached to the side addition. 9) Construct narrow 2-story rear additions to the rear (north) and west elevations. The additions will be clad in brick and stucco and capped with metal roofs that continue the slope of the existing roof. The side addition features shallow square bays tucked under the second-story roofline. The rear addition will include a covered porch at the northwest corner, a shallow second-floor balcony in the center, and a stone patio at the northeast corner. 10) Demolish the one-story detached garage and construct and 2-story garage clad in hardiplank and capped with a front-gabled roof covered in asphalt shingles. The garage will feature casement multi-lite clad-wood windows and a wood garage door. A metal staircase on the north elevation will lead to a second-floor balcony with metal railings and a wood door. RESEARCH The building at 1404 Hardouin Avenue was constructed as a duplex around 1936 by Albert Johnson. Johnson also was the longest-term occupant, living in the property until 1947. No biographical information could be …

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C.5 - HR-20-091383_3313 Bryker Dr.pdf original pdf

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C.5 - 1 HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION PERMITS IN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICTS JULY 27, 2020 HR-2020-091383 3313 BRYKER DRIVE/1705 W. 34TH STREET OLD WEST AUSTIN NATIONAL REGISTER HISTORIC DISTRICT PROPOSAL Demolish a contributing ca. 1941-42 duplex and construct a new building. ARCHITECTURE The existing duplex is composed of two parts: 3313 Bryker Drive and 1705 W. 34th Street. The W. 34th Street building was constructed first; it is a side-gabled frame dwelling with gabled entryway, shallow eaves, and 6:6 wood windows. The Bryker Drive addition has a hipped roof, a partial- width covered porch, a gabled addition, and 6:6 and 1:1 wood windows. Both halves of the single- story duplex have horizontal wood siding and composition shingle roofs. A series of additions dating from the 1940s and ’50s abuts the duplex’s rear elevation. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS 1) Demolish existing duplex. 2) Construct a new two-story residence. The proposed new building faces Bryker Drive. It is clad in vertical wood siding and capped by a compound roof with composition shingles and exposed rafter tails. Its fenestration pattern and window sizes are irregular, with undivided clad wood casement windows and sliding glass doors. Its main elevation contains a covered front porch and horizontal-paneled garage door. The north elevation at W. 34th Street features a partial- width screened porch and stucco-clad chimney, as well as a pool. The building’s front wall is set back 20 feet from Bryker Drive and approximately 15 feet from the W. 34th Street utility easement, with the pool’s closest corner just over 11 feet from the W. 34th easement. RESEARCH The duplex at 3313 Bryker Drive and 1705 W. 34th Street was built in two phases in 1941 and 1942. During the historic period, both addresses were primarily owned by Alice T. D. Branyon, a clerical supervisor with the Texas Employment Commission. She was twice widowed; after the death of her first husband in 1941, she lived in the 3313 Bryker half of the duplex until 1947, when she moved into the 1705 W. 34th Street half. Upon her marriage to Roy J. Branyon, the couple moved out. After Roy Branyon’s 1958 death, Alice Branyon moved back into 1705 W. 34th Street. Branyon’s daughter and son-in-law, Jeanne and Lee R. Maulding, occupied the Bryker Drive half of the duplex from 1947 to at least 1959. Lee Maulding was a National Guardsman and WWII veteran working at Camp Mabry. In …

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C.5.1 - 3313 Bryker - Citizen Comments original pdf

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Gaudette, Angela From: Sent: To: Cc: Subject: John Theiss < Thursday, July 23, 2020 4:53 PM PAZ Preservation Susan Theiss Att: Angela Gaudette > *** External Email - Exercise Caution *** Review Case number HR 20‐091383 While I believe that the improvements to the property will benefit the neighborhood, I would appreciate it if the board required the owner to at least mow and edge the property, immediately. It has been an eyesore since before Thanksgiving 2019. I expect they'll move to demolition quickly, but it would be considerate of the neighbors, (actually the whole neighborhood, since the property is on a main entrance to the neighborhood) to have it look decent until it is a construction site. John Theiss 3304 Bryker Drive. Your best life is the one you share with others. 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 CSIRT@austintexas.gov. 1

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C.5.1 - 3313 Bryker_HLC_exhibit200618.pdf original pdf

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BM=620.4' N86°36'20"E C=40.61' A=48.36' R=24.04' GUY WIRE EP 15'-0" W EST 34th STR EET SUPPORT WIRE (S35°40'E 83.65') AAG HP=622.9 11'-4" EP RE-BUILD CURB & GUTTER OH ELEC LINE PROPERTY LINE BLDG SETBACK ROOF OVERHANG ) ' 8 5 . ' 6 6 W 8 5 ° 8 2 S ( 9'-2" 11'-11" POOL (16X31) PROPOSED 2-STORY RESIDENCE FFE=623.5 AAG=622.7 5'-0" 5'-6" AC AC AC POOL EQ. (N60°45'W 110') OH ELEC LINE AAG LP=622.5 10'-0" E EP 25'-0" 26'-2" 20'-0" I E V R D R E K Y R B ) ' ' . 7 0 0 8 E 8 5 ° 8 2 N ( W COA T-1 APPROACH 14'-0" CONCRETE DRIVEWAY NORTH STUART SAMPLEY A R C H I T E C T P 512-771-8856 STUARTSAMPLEYARCHITECT.COM MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS E R E D AR C IS T G E R S T A T H I T E C T S A X E FO E T 6-18-2020 I E V R D R E K Y R B 3 1 3 3 BP1 SITEPLAN - SCALE: 1/16"=1'-0"@11X17 ROOF BELOW L I A R D R A U G " 6 3 DN STAIR 0 5 / 6 2 T N E M E S A C D E R E P M E T BEDRM-2 CLST 8 6 / 0 5 8 6 / 6 2 BATH-2 HALL-2 28/68 26/68 28/68 26/68 LINEN CLST WALK-IN CLST 26/68 20'-0" 0 5 / 6 2 T N E M E S A C D E R E P M E T 0 5 / 6 2 T N E M E S A C S S E R G E 0 5 / 6 2 T N E M E S A C S S E R G E 0 5 / 6 2 T N E M E S A C S S E R G E 0 5 / 6 2 T N E M E S A C S S E R G E " 8 - ' 7 3 ROOF BELOW BEDRM-3 ROOF BELOW STUART SAMPLEY A R C H I T E C T P 512-771-8856 STUARTSAMPLEYARCHITECT.COM MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS E R E D AR C IS T G E R S T A T H I T E C T S A X E …

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C.6 - 85 Rainey St - Sign original pdf

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Client Approval Landlord Approval Printed Name: Printed Name: Signature: Signature: Date: Date: Idle Hands Artbook for Client Review and Approval Ion Art Project #5513 NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Client Contact Info: Matt Wolski matt@midaswillum.com 330-328-2732 Project Address: 85 Rainey St. Austin, TX 78701 Date: 5.14.20 Rev: 6.16.20 407 Radam Lane, suite A100 Austin, TX 78745 512.326.9333 Ion Art Inc. 2020 All Rights Reserved All rights reserved. The intellectual property, concepts, and designs contained in this document are the exclusive property of Ion Art, Inc. Neither the document nor the information it contains may be copied, disclosed to others, or used in connection with any work or project other than the specic project for which it has been prepared and developed, without the written consent of Ion Art, Inc. Idle Hands | Site Plan 50’ 12’ sign location sign location Disclaimers: 407 Radam Lane, suite A100 Austin, TX 78745 512.326.9333 - Due to variations in monitors, screens, and printers, the approved color choices may not be accurately represented on this document. - Color selections on illuminated digital prints will need to be claried as color matched when the sign is lit or non-lit. Ion Art Inc. 2020 All Rights Reserved 1 All rights reserved. The intellectual property, concepts, and designs contained in this document are the exclusive property of Ion Art, Inc. Neither the document nor the information it contains may be copied, disclosed to others, or used in connection with any work or project other than the specic project for which it has been prepared and developed, without the written consent of Ion Art, Inc. Idle Hands | Concept 2B - Two-Sided Pylon Sign ” 3 ’ 3 1 ” 0 ’ 9 87 1/2” ” 4 ’ 5 Night View Scale: 1 1/2” = 1’ ” 8 / 7 9 1 Tabs welded to existing 1/2” steel 17” ” 9 ’ 5 Face view Scale: 1” = 1’ 26 1/8” ” 2 / 1 2 ’ 5 1 ” 2 / 1 5 3 ” 2 5 ” 8 2 ” 4 2 West Elevation Scale: 1/2” = 1’ Sign post 24.00” below grade North Elevation Scale: 1/2” = 1’ 62” Disclaimers: 407 Radam Lane, suite A100 Austin, TX 78745 512.326.9333 - Due to variations in monitors, screens, and printers, the approved color choices may not be accurately represented on this document. - Color selections on illuminated digital prints will …

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C.6 - SB-2020-09136 - 85 Rainey St original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION APPLICATION FOR A HISTORIC SIGN PERMIT JULY 27, 2020 SB-2020-09136 85 RAINEY STREET RAINEY STREET NATIONAL REGISTER DISTRICT C.6 - 1 PROPOSAL Install a neon pylon sign. PROJECT SPECIFICATIONS The proposed sign is a freestanding sign located in front of the business, which is located in a historic house. The aluminum cabinet is roughly 20” high and 26” wide, with white neon text and dark gray vinyl graphics. The coloring is muted, with a very light green face and a darker green on the side of the cabinet. STANDARDS FOR REVIEW Standards for signs in National Register districts include: Number of signs. The Commission allows one sign per building, unless the building has multiple tenants; in this case, the Commission may allow one sign per façade module, if the façade modules correspond to tenant spaces. The Commission may also allow one sign for each street frontage if the building is at an intersection. A single directory sign is appropriate for a large building with multiple tenants. A single sign is proposed. The project meets this standard. Sign types. The Commission may allow window signs, awning signs, projecting signs, and flush mounted signs for most commercial buildings. Freestanding signs are allowed for office and retail uses in historic residential buildings. The proposed project includes one freestanding sign located in front of a historic residential building. The project meets this standard. Sign size. The maximum size for signs depends on the sign type. No maximum size is specified for freestanding signs. The proposed sign is roughly 20” high and 26” wide, with an approximate area of 4 square feet. The project meets this standard. Sign Design, Coloring and Materials. Use simple shapes, such as rectangular or oval signs. The Commission recommends painted wood or metal signs with matte finishes for all signs; plastic, reflective materials, and unfinished surfaces are not allowed. Limit the colors used in a sign to no more than three. For sites with multiple signs, all signs should have corresponding or matching designs, coloring and materials. Signs should match or complement the existing color scheme of the building to the maximum extent feasible. The proposed sign has a moderately simple shape and is made of aluminum painted green. The project somewhat meets this standard. Lettering. No more than two typefaces are allowed. Avoid lettering which appears too contemporary in the sign. The proposed sign includes one …

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D.1 - 2502 Park View Drive - Engineers Report original pdf

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D.1 - 2502 Park View Drive - link to article on Air Conditioned Village original pdf

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https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/austin‐air‐conditioned‐village?fbclid=IwAR0WOb9B‐ wKPdfwBcb04uSMBSJ8DvR3aSyE8sZDeCFyiT5KKfWGQDJv3gIQ

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D.1 - 2502 Park View Drive - REVISED_Engineers Report original pdf

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D.1 - 2502 Park View Drive - Staff Report original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION JULY 27, 2020 DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS HDP-2020-0214 2502 PARK VIEW DRIVE D.1 - 1 PROPOSAL Demolish a ca. 1954 house. ARCHITECTURE One-story, rectangular -plan, shallow front-gabled mid-century Modern-styled wood frame house with rectangular asbestos panels set into a metal framing system on the front and back, and wood siding on secondary elevations. The house has fixed-sash and horizontal- sliding fenestration with a row of clerestory windows bridging the space between the asbestos panel section and the slightly-pitched roof, which is notable for its deep eaves. There is a pop-up, shed roofed section in the middle of the roof, that opens onto a side elevation. The house has a shed-roofed double carport with exposed beams and columns; the carport figures prominently into the impression of the house from the street and has ornamental brick walls, further identifying the house as an example of mid-century Modern design. RESEARCH The house is located in the “Air Conditioned Village” of northwest Austin, and would be contributing to a potential historic district encompassing the remaining homes of the 22 originally built as demonstration houses to study and promote the feasibility of central air conditioning in moderately-sized and moderately-priced homes. Austin’s Air Conditioned Village was one of and the largest of several demonstration projects throughout the country in the early 1950s, at a time when central air conditioning was more common in commercial buildings and high-end residences, than in more modest houses, mostly due to the cost of installation. The National Association of Home Builders sponsored the construction of Austin’s Air Conditioned Village in 1953 as a new subdivision just west of Burnet Road in the northwestern part of the city. The next year, 22 homes were built to appeal to middle- class taste and budgets, in varying styles, but all with central air conditioning furnished by several manufacturers, including Chrysler, which provided the air conditioning for this house at 2502 Park View Drive. This house was known as the Chrysler “Air-Temp” House, and was designed by local architect Fred Day, who had been associated with several of the leading architectural firms in the city, including Fehr and Granger, noted for their mid-century Modern designs. The house was built by Wayne A. Burns, the developer of the Edgewood Subdivision, which encompassed the Air Conditioned Village. The Air Conditioned Village was a novel concept, and was part economic feasibility study and part social …

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D.2 - HDP-2020-0231_2609 San Pedro St.pdf original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION JULY 27, 2020 DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS HDP-2020-0231 2609 SAN PEDRO STREET D.2 - 1 PROPOSAL ARCHITECTURE RESEARCH Demolish a ca. 1935 house, originally constructed as a duplex. Two-story frame hipped-roof duplex with horizontal wood siding, 6:6 wood windows, composition shingles, and a second-floor balcony. In front of the main building, twin single-car frame garages flank the lot. The building at 2609 San Pedro Street was originally a duplex, built in 1935 as a rental property for medical journalist Josephine Draper Daniel. Daniel resided down the block at another rental property on Salado Street until she moved to San Pedro after 1944. After the 1914 death of her husband, physician F. E. Daniel, Josephine Daniel took over his position as editor of the Texas Medical Journal for the next thirty years. F. E. Daniel, a former Confederate army surgeon and Texas Medical College professor, founded the journal in 1885. It later became the most influential medical publication of its time in Texas. Prior to her tenure as editor, Josephine Daniel contributed as founder of the Texas Medical Journal’s “Women’s Department” section since 1912, appealing to a wider demographic than the predominantly male medical field. As editor, Daniel introduced her audience to early tenets of feminism in healthcare and openly contradicted the eugenicist positions championed by her late husband. In a fall 2001 article for The Historian, entitled “The Woman's Department: Maternalism and Feminism in the Texas Medical Journal,” historian Courtney Shah describes Daniel’s evolution as a journalist: Josephine Daniel, although not openly recommending a radical feminist political platform, quietly introduced feminist ideas to her maternalist audience as well as many male physicians. The Women’s Department walked a narrow path between deference to medical and societal experts, and a demand to liberate women from the very institutions the experts represented: the sexual hierarchy of the family, the medical profession, and the state […] [As editor] she [promoted] her own two-pronged campaign of reform: maternalist issues such as reducing infant mortality and pure food laws, and the more radical feminist edge of birth control and women’s emancipation. (Shah 2001, 96-97) Daniel wrote frankly about the importance of reproductive education, stating that "The health and happiness of every girl demands that she receive when approaching adolescence an intelligent presentation of the vital life process” (95). In 1929, Daniel sold the journal and devoted her time to women’s health and literacy …

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D.2.1. - HDP-2020-0231_2609SanPedro_DanielArticle.pdf original pdf

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The Woman's Department: Maternalism and Feminism in the Texas Medical Journal Author(s): Courtney Shah Source: The Historian, FALL 2001, Vol. 64, No. 1 (FALL 2001), pp. 81-98 Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.com/stable/24450673 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms Taylor & Francis, Ltd. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Historian This content downloaded from (cid:0)162.89.0.57 on Fri, 10 Jul 2020 16:19:21 UTC(cid:0) (cid:0) All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) (cid:0) The Woman's Department: Maternalism and Feminism in the Texas Medical Journal Courtney Shah In 1912, a physician praised the Texas Medical Journals newly established Woman's Department in a letter to the editor. "The department you are establishing... along this line, giving women good, wholesome knowledge without the taint of quackery is a most worthy undertaking and deserves hearty support,"1 he wrote. The Texas Medical Journal, the most popular and long-standing independent medical journal in the state, was the creation of Dr. Ferdinand Eugene Daniel. His wife, Josephine Draper Daniel, founded the Woman's Department as an insert within the pages of the TMJ. Like so many journalists and activists in the Progressive Era, Josephine used maternalism as a justification to expand women's roles in the public sphere, as well as to justify her own ambitions. But while she usually stressed conservative reforms that did not challenge the dominant model of family life or women's place within it, Josephine Daniel simultaneously presented two curious lines of dissent. First, she challenged the TM/s (and thus her husband's) pro-eugenics stance; and second, she introduced a veneer of radical feminism into the publication, expressed mainly in a more open attitude toward women's sexuality. As Americans coped with the harsh realities of industrialization, urbanization, and immigration in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, a reform-minded cadre of well educated, middle-class men and women saw the possibility for change to eradicate the …

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D.3 - HDP-2020-0233_5512 Shoalwood Ave.pdf original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION JULY 27, 2020 DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS HDP-2020-0233 5512 SHOALWOOD AVE. D.3 - 1 PROPOSAL Relocate a ca. 1939 house. ARCHITECTURE One-story stone veneer residence with cross-gabled, composition shingle roof featuring shallow Minimal Traditional-style eaves, 6:6 wood windows, and a Tudor Revival-style arched entryway with peaked gable. RESEARCH The house at 5512 Shoalwood Avenue was built in 1939. Its first residents were renowned Texas landscape architect Charles Coatsworth Pinkney and his wife Evelyn. Pinkney, newly arrived in Austin from an apprenticeship under Olmstead Brothers in Boston, began his own firm that year. Pinkney designed the landscapes for Rosewood and Chalmers Courts, the Delwood Duplex and Allandale subdivisions, the French Legation and other high-profile historic sites in Austin including schools, trails, military and medical facilities, and private residences. 1945 City Council meeting minutes also list Pinkney as a City planning engineer consulting on the proposed interstate highway construction. Pinkney’s clients included the Texas Historical Commission, Bergstrom AFB, IBM, the Texas State Hospital, and dozens of Austin’s most prominent families; over a thousand projects have been catalogued at the Austin History Center. Of these, at least ninety date to within Pinkney’s residence at 5512 Shoalwood Avenue. (Around three hundred entries remain undated.) In 1948, the Pinkneys sold the house to Alice Stevens, a former schoolteacher employed as a bookkeeper at the State Liquor Control Board. Pinkney lived in the home until 1961, according to Statesman classified ads. STAFF COMMENTS 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 historic designation criteria for landmark designation (LDC §25-2- 352). The property may demonstrate significance according to City Code: a) Architecture. The building is constructed with Tudor Revival and Minimal Traditional stylistic influences. Stone-veneer houses from this period represent a rapidly disappearing regional building type. b) Historical association. The building is associated with landscape architect Charles Coatsworth Pinkney. c) Archaeology. The house was not evaluated for its potential to yield significant data concerning the human history or prehistory of the region. d) Community value. The house does not 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 demographic group. e) Landscape feature. The property is not a significant natural or designed landscape with artistic, aesthetic, cultural, or historical value to …

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D.3.1 - 5512 Shoalwood_ApplicantEmail.pdf original pdf

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Friday, July 24, 2020 at 8:44:03 AM Central Daylight Time Subject: Date: From: To: AEachments: AusGn HLC leJer re 5512 Shoalwood.pdf, InspecGon Report - 5512 Shoalwood - 07222020.pdf Fw: 5512 Shoalwood Ave Friday, July 24, 2020 at 8:39:32 AM Central Daylight Time Sadowsky, Steve Contreras, Kalan Steve Sadowsky Historic PreservaGon Officer City of AusGn, Texas 974-6454 From: Mark Canada Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2020 5:46 PM To: GaudeJe, Angela <Angela.GaudeJe@ausGntexas.gov>; Sadowsky, Steve <Steve.Sadowsky@ausGntexas.gov> Subject: 5512 Shoalwood Ave *** External Email - Exercise Caution *** Dear Angela & Steve, I am reaching out to you today to provide insight into the future of my property. I strongly encourage you to review my two aJachments in advance of my hearing. As you know, my property is not going to be demolished, but instead relocated. And not just relocated, but fully restored by the new owners. The future owner's story is compelling and I applaud their vision for the house. I believe you will feel the same aaer reading their leJer addressed to you. The house, as it sits, is in great need of rehabilitaGon. I've aJached a review from Green Earth Engineering (structural engineer) regarding the current state of the dwelling. It's in very bad shape structurally. The enGre 1100 sq a house is racking to the south, the foundaGon is haphazardly cobbled together from unpermiJed and /or non-compliant foundaGon work, and the roof structural framing is completely inadequate by today's standards. When you walk into the house, the floor is rolling +/- 4 " and the walls are out of plumb by over 2" in some places with only an 8" ceiling. To put it bluntly, it's a hot mess. I truly believe that Dawson and Leanne Clark are the best of all possible candidates for this property. Not only do they plan to fully restore and live in the structure, but they also plan to create a stone coJage garden around the property. I think Mr. Pinkney will be proud to see the end result of all their love and hard work. -- Respecmully, Mark Canada CAUTION: This email was received at the City of AusGn, from an EXTERNAL source. Please use cauGon when clicking links or opening aJachments. If you believe this to be a malicious and/or phishing email, please forward this email to CSIRT@ausGntexas.gov. Page 1 of 2

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