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Attachment #6 Page 1 of 23 Attachment #6 Page 2 of 23 This document is intended to supplement Sections 10-318(d)(2) and 10-319(d)(2) of the Tallahassee Land Development Code by providing property owners definitions and pictorial examples of the criteria for listing on the local register. Properties that are considered contributing are required to adhere to the indicated criteria. Section 10 – 316 – Definitions: Contributing property means a site, building, structure or object, at least 50 years old, located within the boundaries of a designated historic preservation district or special character district, which, by its location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association adds to a historic preservation or special character district’s sense of time and place and historical development. Properties less than 50 years old may be determined to be contributing if a strong justification of their historical or architectural contribution to the district’s sense of time and place and historical development is determined to exist, or the historical attributes of the district are considered to be less than 50 years old. SECTION 10-318(d)(2), CRITERIA FOR LISTING A PROPERTY ON THE LOCAL REGISTER AND REZONING WITH AN HPO (1) A site, building, structure, or object must meet the following criteria before it may be listed on the local register and rezoned with an HPO: a. It possesses: integrity (a property’s authentic historic identity evidenced by the survival of physical characteristics that existed during the property’s historic or prehistoric period) of location (the place where the property was constructed or where an historic event occurred), design (the combination of elements that create the form, plan, space, structure, and style of the property), setting (the environment of the property), materials (the physical elements that form the property), workmanship (the physical evidence of the crafts of a particular culture or people during any given period in history or prehistory), feeling (the property conveys the sense of a particular period of time), and association (the direct link between the property and its time of historic importance); or b. It is associated with events or persons that are significant to local, state, or national history (Historical Association Criteria - The Grove, Dodd House, and Riley House); or c. It embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction (Architecture Criteria – Any property where the original physical aspects of its design, materials, form, style, or construction techniques are still present), or represents the work of a master (Frank Lloyd Wright, Victor Lundy), or possesses high artistic values; or d. It has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history (Archaeological Sites). 2 Attachment #6 Page 3 of 23 The following are examples of properties that meet the above criteria (note some properties may meet more than one criterion) a. PROPERTY WITH INTEGRITY The Hays Hood House is one of Tallahassee's few remaining examples of Queen Anne architectural design, a style popular from the 1880s through the early 1900s, characterized by turrets, towers and elaborate decorative woodwork. Its setting remains much as it did when the house was constructed in 1910 and it is still in its original location. When looking at the home one sees the original building materials and the workmanship that went into the decorative components of the building, giving one the feeling that they are looking at a home associated with the Victorian era. (NOTE: This is an example of integrity for a Victorian period building but the definition can be applied to properties from other time periods). b. PROPERTIES ASSOCIATED WITH PERSONS OF LOCAL, STATE OR NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE Riley House, home of noted African-American educator and community leader, John Riley. Dodd House, home of educator Dr. William Dodd and his daughter Dorothy Dodd, Florida’s first State Librarian. The Grove, home of Territorial Governor Richard Keith Call and Florida Governor LeRoy Collins. b. PROPERTIES ASSOCIATED WITH EVENTS OF LOCAL, STATE, OR NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE McCrory’s Department Store, site of 1960s civil rights lunch counter sitins and demonstrations (demolished 2012). 3 Attachment #6 Page 4 of 23 Knott House, site of the Emancipation Proclamation announcement in Tallahassee. Old Unitarian Fellowship Building on FSU Campus, meeting place of the Council on Human Relations, the first integrated civil rights organization in Tallahassee. c. PROPERTIES THAT EMBODY THE DISTINCTIVE CHARARACTERISTICS OF A TYPE, PERIOD, OR METHOD OF CONSTRUCTION. Numerous architectural styles and building types are represented in Tallahassee and various guidebooks are available to assist with their identification. The two books featured here are available at the Office of the Tallahassee Trust for Historic Preservation,423 E. Virginia Street. d. PROPERTIES THAT HAVE YIELDED, OR MAY BE LIKELY TO YIELD, INFORMATION IMPORTANT IN PREHISTORY OR HISTORY. De Soto Archaeological Site 4 Attachment #6 Page 5 of 23 SECTION 10-319(d)(2), CRITERIA FOR LISTING A HISTORIC PRESERVATION DISTRICT ON THE LOCAL REGISTER AND REZONING WITH AN HPO. A historic preservation district may be listed on the local register and rezoned with an HPO if it: a. has significant character, interest or value, as part of the development, heritage; or b. is the site of an historic event with a significant effect upon society; or c. exemplifies the cultural, political, economic, social or historic heritage of the community; or d. portrays the environment in an era of history characterized by a distinctive architectural style; or e. embodies those distinguishing characteristics of an architectural-type or engineering specimen; or f. is the work of a designer whose individual work has significantly influenced the development of Tallahassee; or g. contains elements of design, detail, materials or craftsmanship which represent a significant innovation; or h. by being part of or related to a square, park or other distinctive area, should be developed or preserved according to a plan based on an historic, cultural or architectural motif; or i. owing to its unique location or singular physical characteristic, represents an established and familiar visual feature of the neighborhood, community or city. The following are examples of properties that meet the above criteria (note some properties may meet more than one criterion). a. PROPERTIES THAT HAVE SIGNIFICANT CHARACTER, INTEREST OR VALUE AS PART OF THE DEVELOPMENT, HERITAGE. TERRITORIAL TALLAHASSEE The Grove c. 1825 ANTEBELLUM AND TURN OF THE 19TH TO 20TH CENTURY TALLAHASSEE Calhoun Street Special Character District (500 Block of Calhoun) 5 Attachment #6 Page 6 of 23 19th Century Store Fronts (Monroe Street near Park Avenue) FIRST PART OF TALLAHASSEE THE TWENTIETH CENTRURY Myers Park Neighborhood b. PROPERTY WHERE AN HISTORIC EVENT HAD A SIGNIFICANT EFFECT UPON SOCIETY. Knott House - site of the Emancipation Proclamation announcement in Tallahassee c. PROPERTIES THAT EXEMPLIFY THE CULTURAL, POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, SOCIAL OR HISTORIC HERITAGE OF THE COMMUNITY. CULTURAL Florida A&M Neighborhood Smokey Hollow 6 Attachment #6 Page 7 of 23 Bond Community POLITICAL Capitol and Surrounding Buildings ECONOMIC Wahnish Cigar Factory HISTORIC AND POLITICAL Lafayette Park Neighborhood subdivisions, developed in response to Florida’s 1920s growth and the housing needs of a larger government. HISTORIC Myers Park Neighborhood, designed in response to the Suburban City Beautiful Movement. 7 Attachment #6 Page 8 of 23 d. PROPERTIES THAT PORTRAY THE ENVIRONMENT IN AN ERA OF HISTORY CHARACTERIZED BY A DISTINCTIVE ARCHITECTURAL STYLE. Greek Revival The Greek Revival style was dominant from the 1820s through the 1860s and a style popular with wealthy plantation owners. The Greek Revival style is exemplified by buildings such as The Grove and The Columns. Element Description Form Rectangular or square, symmetrical. Common elements Full height porches supported by classical order columns and windows and doors with window transoms and sidelights. Windows are rectangular with double-hung sashes. Height Two to 2½ stories. Entry Doors commonly have transoms and sidelights. Materials Brick or wood siding is common. Roof Low pitched gable or hip. 8 Attachment #6 Page 9 of 23 Italianate The Italian Renaissance Revival style of architecture was popular in the United States from the 1840s through the 1880s. Examples are limited to the Calhoun and Park Avenue neighborhoods. Element Description Form Symmetrical, rectangular. Common Elements Wide overhanging boxed eaves, decorative brackets, second story windows are typically smaller and less elaborate than those on first story, pedimented windows, quoins, rusticated first story. Height Two or four stories. Entry Recessed central entry or porch accentuated with classical columns or piers, classical door surrounds. Materials Buff brick, stone, stucco. Roof Low pitched hipped. Possibly with a small room or “lantern” projecting from the center. 9 Attachment #6 Page 10 of 23 Queen Anne The Queen Anne style in the state was exclusively applied to residential buildings. Its popularity spread rapidly throughout the state in the 1880s and 1890s. Examples of this style are found in the older Park Avenue and Calhoun Street neighborhoods. Element Description Form Irregular. Common elements Tall brick chimneys, cresting, ornamental metal, asymmetrical placement of windows, double-hung sash windows with multiple light configurations in upper sash, decorative woodwork, verge board. Height 1½ to 2½ stories. Entry Set within a full or wrap around porch. Materials Wood shingles, weatherboard and novelty siding are common wall materials. Roof Multi-planed gable, hipped, and pyramids; towers, turrets, and gables are common secondary roof structures. 10 Attachment #6 Page 11 of 23 Colonial Revival Referring to a renewed interest in early English and Dutch houses in America, the Colonial Revival style borrows heavily from Georgian and Federal architecture. Popular from the 1880s through the1940s, Colonial Revival style houses are found throughout the City. Element Description Form Formal and symmetrical. Common elements Classically inspired detailing, boxed eaves, cornices decorated with dentils or modillions. Windows consist of multi-light, double-hung windows. Height One to two stories. Entry Accentuated front door with possible fanlight and sidelights, pediment supported by pilasters or slender columns to form an entry porch. Materials Brick or Painted wood in whites, grays, beiges and gray blues with white trim work. Window sash and shutters are painted white, black, green or red. Roof Simple gable, gambrel or sometimes hipped roofs. Cross gables and dormers are typical. 11 Attachment #6 Page 12 of 23 Tudor Tudor style structures are based on the medieval architecture of England. Tudor style structures are based on the medieval architecture of England and can be found throughout the city. This style was very popular from the turn of the century through the 1940s Tudor style structures are found throughout the City. Element Description Form Asymmetrical with a vertical emphasis. Common elements Tall, narrow casement windows with diamond pattern glass separated by lead cams usually set in groups; double-hung sash, massive chimneys, half timbering in gables. Height 1—2 stories. Entry Round arched doorways with board and batten doors, Tudor arches in door surrounds, quoins. Materials Brick or stucco, or wood. Tudor style structures typically feature the color of the brick or stone as the primary color. Stucco was painted in shades of beige and the timber frame stained or painted brown. Roof Steeply pitched gable roof with cross gables and heavy timbering (wooden details which appear to be a heavy hewn timber frame). 12 Attachment #6 Page 13 of 23 Craftsman or Bungalow The Craftsman style, popular in the first part of the 20th century can be found throughout the City. Concentrations of these structures are found in the City’s subdivisions established before the 1950s. Element Description Form Rectangular or asymmetrical. Common elements Double-hung or casement windows, exposed rafters, decorative beams or braces. Height One or 1½ stories. Entry Front porches with short, square, battered columns set upon massive piers or a solid porch balustrade. Materials Wood or other natural materials such as stone, which may be stained or painted in dark earth tones. Greens, browns, beiges and dark reds are historic body colors. Today's modern tastes have lightened the paint schemes to include a number of light pastels for the body color, with white as the accompanying trim color. All white structures are discouraged because they do not adequately highlight the simple trim and detail work employed by the craftsman or bungalow style. Roof Low pitched gable, sometimes hipped, unenclosed eaves with exposed rafters add rhythm and detail to the eave line. 13 Attachment #6 Page 14 of 23 Vernacular The term "vernacular" refers to a structure that is not pure in its design style, but loosely based on the principal of a single or multiple styles. These structures are typically built by owners or contractors who employed either pattern books (containing plans for homes and construction details circulated early in the mid-19th century) or from their personal memories for the design. Examples of the style are found throughout the city in neighborhoods established before the 1950s. Element Description Form Square, rectangular, ell, and irregular plans. Common elements Wooden double-hung windows with one-over-one or two-over-two sashes are used. Simple detailing on porches and around eaves. Height One to 2½ stories. Entry Porches are usually full facade or wrapped. Materials Wood, brick, concrete block, rusticated block, stucco. Roof Gable and hipped roofs with various slopes. May include dormers and cross gables. 14 Attachment #6 Page 15 of 23 Minimal Traditional Due to the economic depression of the 1930s, the Minimal Traditional style became popular. Built immediately preceding and following World War II it reflects the form of traditional styles from the period, but lacks their decorative detailing. Element Description Form Horizontal. Common elements Stripped down versions of traditional styles with little or no applied decoration. Usually a large chimney with at least one front-facing gable. Height One story but sometimes two. Entry Entry not emphasized. Materials Wood, brick, stone, or a mixture of these wall cladding materials. Roof Low pitched hipped or gable roof with a narrow overhanging eves. 15 Attachment #6 Page 16 of 23 Art Deco The art deco style became popular in the 1920s and 1930s. This style is predominantly used for public and commercial structures and is frequently used for apartment buildings. Concentrations of the Art Deco style buildings are located in the 300 and 400 blocks of East Gaines Street. Element Description Form A vertical emphasis is placed on the structure through the use of towers or other vertical projections above the roof line. Common elements Stucco, zigzags, chevrons and other stylized and geometric motifs on the facade. Height No requirements. Entry No requirements. Materials Smooth wall surface. Roof No requirements. 16 Attachment #6 Page 17 of 23 Ranch The Ranch style began to take a strong hold on the American housing market in the 1930s. The expanded acceptance of the automobile drastically increased the size of building lots allowing wealthier people to move out of the City and into the suburbs. Early versions utilized traditional architectural detailing such as Mediterranean and Colonial style architectures; however, the building type itself is unmistakable and remains a popular building type today. Ranch style structures were built throughout the city. Element Description Form Horizontal. Common elements Casement, awning, jalousie and picture windows. Windows horizontally oriented. Garages may be located on the front facade of the building, but do not dominate the architecture of the primary facade. Height One story. Entry Entry stoops and small porches. Materials Streamlined and simple materials such as smooth stucco, simple stucco banding replaced textures stucco and ornamental wood. Roof Low pitched hipped or gable roof with broad overhangs. 17 Attachment #6 Page 18 of 23 Contemporary Style Contemporary style structures were built during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Several residential models were constructed throughout the city in neighborhoods established after 1950. Element Description Form Irregular or asymmetrical. Common elements Largely lacking ornamentation, wide overhanging eaves, contrasting wall materials and textures, unusual window shapes and placement, exposed structural members. Height Typically one to two stories. Entry Not emphasized. Materials Various. Roof Various. 18 Attachment #6 Page 19 of 23 Brutalism An architectural style of the mid-20th century, popular from the 1950s to the 1970s, characterized by massive or monolithic forms, usually of poured concrete and typically unrelieved by exterior decoration. The Tallahassee Bank and the Upper Room Chapel are examples of this style. Element Description Form Usually rectangular. Common elements Exposed concrete walls, blockish designs, windows not emphasized. Height One, two, three stories. Entry Not emphasized. Materials Concrete. Roof Flat. 19 Attachment #6 Page 20 of 23 e. PROPERTIES THAT EMBODY THE DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ARCHITECTURAL TYPE OR ENGINEERING SPECIMEN. Water Works Building Electric Building The above are buildings that were designed to house the engineering projects of their time; however, the engineering specimens are no longer in place. f. PROPERTIES THAT ARE THE WORK OF A DESIGNER WHOSE INDIVIDUAL WORK HAS SIGNIFICANTLY INFLUENCED THE DEVELOPMENT OF TALLAHASSEE. Designs by the mid-century modern architectural firm of Barrett and Daffin (and at times Anthony. Figg, Coloney, and Bishop were part of the firm’s name). Civic Center (participated in supervising construction) Bacon & Bacon Agency , Godby High School 20 Attachment #6 Page 21 of 23 Old Unitarian Fellowship Building on FSU Campus g. PROPERTIES THAT CONTAIN ELEMENTS OF DESIGN, DETAIL, MATERIALS, OR CRAFTSMANSHIP WHICH REPRESENT A SIGNIFICANT INNOVATION Victor Lundy’s FSU Methodist Church (Upper Room) Frank Lloyd Wright house - hemicycle design h. PROPERTIES RELATED TO A SQUARE, PARK, OR OTHER DISTINCTIVE AREA, THAT SHOULD BE DEVELOPED OR PRESERVED ACCORDING TO A PLAN BASED ON AN HISTORIC, CULTURAL, OR ARCHITECTURAL MOTIF. Tallahassee’s Chain of Parks 21 Attachment #6 Page 22 of 23 Meyers Park Lafayette Park Los Robles green space i. PROPERTIES THAT OWING TO THEIR UNIQUE LOCATION OR SINGULAR PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTIC REPRESENT AN ESTABLISHED AND FAMILIAR VISUAL FEATURE OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD, COMMUNITY, OR CITY. Los Robles Arch Killearn Gate Green Derby 22 Attachment #6 Page 23 of 23 GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN CRITERIA STATEMENTS Association – The direct link between the property and an important historic event or person. Design – The combination of elements that create the form, plan, space, structure, and style of the property. Feeling - The property evokes the sense of a particular period of time and place. Integrity – A property’s authentic historic identity evidenced by the survival of physical characteristics that existed during the property’s historic or prehistoric period. Location – The place where the property was constructed or where an historic event occurred. Materials - The physical elements that form the property. Prehistory – Occurred before written recorded history. Setting - The environment of and around the property. Significance – The importance of a historic property. Time and Place – The property is in its historic location and appears at it did during a certain time period. Workmanship - The physical evidence of the crafts of a particular culture or people during any given period in history or prehistory (before recorded history). 23