Jump to content

Featured Replies

Posted

As a follow-up to this thread....

 

The 1855 Church Street plat and adjacent areas, now part of the Twin Towers neighborhood.    This should be part of a photo-thread on Twin Towers and Xenia Avenue, yet it is also related to Newcom Plain, as an example of how US 35 divided a community back in the  1960s.…

 

US 35 as a moat dividing the neighborhood, the twin towers of St Mary’s in the background.

 

CS1.jpg

 

CS2.jpg

 

This area shows how the street system was rearranged and “suburbanized” via cul-de-sacs and the curving auto-oriented road geometry to accommodate an overpass.

 

CSa.jpg

 

CSb.jpg

 

CS3.jpg

 

CS4.jpg

 

CS5.jpg

 

Widen open spaces and auto-friendly cul-de-sacs and turning radius  Now all you need is a little shopping center with a Kroger and a big parking lot….

 

CS6.jpg

 

 

This is another interesting little transitional neighborhood with workers cottages and some of those urban I-houses.  On what’s lefty of Haynes Street….

 

CSc.jpg

 

CS8.jpg

 

CS9.jpg

 

In this case we might be seeing spec building, and things get cheaper, as there is no side entry or rear T of L.  Entrance from the front,  but different ways of treating the façade and porch, in detail.

 

CS7.jpg

 

Getting closer to St Mary’s, one gets that stereotypical urban Midwest image of a big Catholic church as the centerpiece of a neighborhood of workers cottages and two-stories….

 

CS7.jpg

 

CS11.jpg

 

(small, zero lot line cottage…maybe more typical of the blocks to the west of St Mary’s)

 

CS12.jpg

 

In this area one sees some of the last of the old-school side-entry urban I-house, but done in wood as rather than brick (similar to the blocks north of US 35).  A comparison of some St Anne’s’ Hill brick version compared with Church Street woods…the family resemblance is pretty clear, I think

 

CSd.jpg

 

now on to Church Street, which is in pretty good shape, considering….

 

CS13.jpg

 

…the brick porch is probably from the 20th century, but nice little ne0gothic touch in that attic window, found throughout the city on houses of this type..  Looks like asbestos cement shingles…

 

CS14.jpg

 

CS15.jpg

 

CS16.jpg

 

CS17.jpg

 

Leaving church on to Nassau Street…I wonder if this was actually a reference to the German state, instead of to William and Mary (as in the Nassau references on the East Coast).

 

CS19.jpg

 

CS18.jpg

 

Seeing those shotguns made me think of the types you find in Louisville, and these next two look like a local version of the camelback, on a Dayton-style “sawed-off shotgun” (not as long as the ones found down south).

 

 

CS21.jpg

 

CS20.jpgX

 

CS22.jpg

 

More housing, off in the Newcom Plain plat now..streets stubbing off into the freeway,  mix of two stories and cottages, late 19th /early 20th century detail on that porch to the left, and an alley house, which appear every now and then in this area…..

 

 

CS23.jpg

 

CS24.jpg

 

 

And one of those pix or images that just stay with you,  at least this one sticks in my minds-eye for this neighborhood.

 

CS25.jpg

 

 

Interesting stuff, I was just driving around this area today!

 

Although I like looking at this neighborhood from 35, I don't like seeing the highway (and what it did) in the neighborhood.

Great job!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

'nother excellent neighborhood survey!

Yay, DAYTON!!!

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.