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Hillside was designed by architect Charles C. Hartmann and built in 1929 for the businessman Julian Price and his wife, Ethel Clay Price.The house, a four-story, 31-room, 180-foot-long (55 m) dwelling in the Tudor Revival style, sits at 7,266 square feet (675 m 2).
The plans have been drawn and sent from the studio of Frank Ll. Wright, architect, Chicago, and work upon the construction will begin at once." The "Home News" then reported on February 19, 1903, that the building would be complete by "the last day of April". The Hillside Home School institution ran from 1887 until 1915. [3]
Hillside Home School I, also known as the Hillside Home Building, was a Shingle Style building that architect Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1887 for his aunts, Ellen and Jane Lloyd Jones for their Hillside Home School in the town of Wyoming, Wisconsin (south of the village of Spring Green). The building functioned as a dormitory and library.
It was home of Dr. John E. Pendleton, who started to build the house in 1861, but halted construction, storing mahogany and cherry wood within the partly completed house. He "raised a company of soldiers in Ohio and Muhlenburg Counties and entered the Confederate service as their captain in the Ninth Regiment of the First Kentucky Brigade, in ...
The 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame house was built in 1845, and was designed in the Gothic Revival style. It was the site at which Benjamin Watson established one of the nation's first garden nurseries, the "Old Colony Gardens".
Hill House, or variations such as Hill Cottage and Hill Farm, may refer to: in Scotland. Hill House, Helensburgh, Scotland, a house designed by architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh; in the United States. Hugh Wilson Hill House, Carrollton, Alabama, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP)
Slope house, the different floors have ground floor in different levels. The lower floor is partly underground. Slope house or Souterrain house is a house with soil or rock completely covering the bottom floor on one side and partly two of the walls on the bottom floor. The house has two entries depending on the ground level.
Vancouver's first laneway house to be completed under the 2009 laneway house bylaw was the Mendoza Lane House by Lanefab Design/Build. [18] The Mendoza lane house is 710sf and was built on a 33'x122' lot and features a single outdoor parking space. The project was granted an occupancy permit by the City of Vancouver in May 2010. [19]