| Title | 216913 |
| NR ID | SG100007561 |
| State | Utah |
| County | Salt Lake County |
| City | Holladay |
| Address | LONE PEAK DR./FAIROAKS DR. |
| Listed Date | 2022/04/11 |
| Scanning Institution | borndigital |
| Holding Institution | Utah Division of State History |
| Collection | Utah Historic Buildings Collection |
| Building Name | PARADE OF HOMES LAKEWOOD SITE HISTORIC DISTRICT |
| Spatial Coverage | Salt Lake County |
| Rights Management | Digital Image © 2022 Utah Division of State History. All Rights Reserved. |
| Publisher | Utah Division of State History, Preservation Section |
| Genre | Historic Buildings |
| Type | Text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Date Digital | 2023-08-14 |
| Language | eng |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6xxtzde |
| Setname | dha_uhbr |
| ID | 2330519 |
| OCR Text | Show NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES REGISTRATION FORM This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. 1. Name of Property Historic name: Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Other names/Site Number: 1955 Parade of Homes Site No. 1 Name of related multiple property listing: NRHP Listed Date: 4/11/2022 (Enter “N/A” if property is not part of a multiple property listing) 2. Location Street & number: East Lone Peak Drive and South Fairoaks Drive City or town: Holladay State: Utah County: Salt Lake County Not for Publication: Vicinity: 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this ☒ nomination ☐ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property ☒ meets ☐ does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant at the following level(s) of significance: National Statewide X Local Applicable National Register Criteria: X A B X C D /SHPO Signature of certifying official/Title Date 2/22/2022 Utah Division of State History/Office of Historic Preservation State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government In my opinion, the property ☐ meets ☐ does not meet the National Register criteria. Signature of commenting official: Date Title: State or Federal Agency/Bureau or Tribal Government 1 NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Salt Lake County, Utah County and State 4. National Park Service Certification I hereby certify that this property is: ☐ Entered in the National Register ☐ Determined eligible for the National Register ☐ Determined not eligible for the National Register ☐ Removed from the National Register ☐ Other (explain): Signature of the Keeper Date of Action 5. Classification Ownership of Property (Check as many boxes as apply) Private Public – Local Public – State Public – Federal ☒ ☐ ☐ ☐ Category of Property (Check only one box) Building(s) District Site Structure Object ☐ ☒ ☐ ☐ ☐ Number of Resources within Property (Do not include previously listed resources in the couth) Contributing Noncontributing 11 6 Buildings Sites Structures Objects 11 6 Total Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register: 2 0 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State 6. Function of Use Historic Functions Current Functions (Enter categories from instructions) (Enter categories from instructions) DOMESTIC / single dwelling DOMESTIC / single dwelling 7. Description Architectural Classification Materials (Enter categories from instructions) (Enter categories from instructions) MODERN MOVEMENT / Ranch WOOD OTHER / Contemporary STONE BRICK Narrative Description (Describe the historic and current physical appearance and condition of the property. Describe contributing and noncontributing resources if applicable. Begin with a summary paragraph that briefly describes the general characteristics of the property, such as its location, type, style, method of construction, setting, size, and significant features. Indicate whether the property has historic integrity.) SUMMARY PARAGRAPH The Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District (Lakewood Historic District) consists of 17 houses situated along East Lone Peak Drive and South Fairoaks Drive in the Lakewood Subdivision in Holladay, Salt Lake County, Utah. The Lakewood site retains a collection of Colonial Revival and Contemporary style ranch type houses and Contemporary type houses (Table 1). The houses are indicative of architectural housing types and styles that were popularized by both contractor-designers and architects in the 1950s. Of the original 17 homes constructed for the 1955 Parade of Homes, 16 are extant, and two of the original houses have been remodeled to the degree that they are no longer able to convey their significance as one of the 1955 model houses in the parade. Three of the model homes no longer retain integrity of materials, design, and workmanship sufficient to convey the original construction and style; however, they do retain integrity of location, setting, feeling, and association sufficient to convey their significance as one of the model homes in the 1955 Parade. Eleven of the extant houses retain integrity sufficient to convey their significance as a model home in the 1955 Parade and are representative of the architectural types and styles of the 1950s. Despite alterations to several of the model homes, the Lakewood Historic District retains integrity of location, design, setting, materials, feeling, and association sufficient to convey period of construction and affiliation with the 1955 Parade of Homes. Overall, the Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District is an identifiable entity that is distinguishable from the surrounding neighborhood with higher style renditions of both traditional ranch type houses featuring influences of Colonial Revival style and modern Contemporary style and type houses. 3 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NARRATIVE DESCRIPTION Setting The Lakewood Historic District is in a suburban setting in Holladay, Salt Lake County, Utah, northeast of the intersection of the Van Winkle Expressway and 5600 South. The houses were among the first to be constructed in the Lakewood Subdivision. The houses in the district are on East Lone Peak and South Fair Oaks Drive, which are without sidewalks and transition in a curve instead of a right-angled intersection. The houses are set back consistently from the street on deep lots and stand between 20 and 30 feet apart from each other. Mature trees, shrubs, and landscaping are present but vary between each house. The surrounding streets are similarly designed, with curving streets without sidewalks, consistent setbacks, and spacing between houses. The use of wood cladding, particularly board and batten, and stone distinguish the model homes from the surrounding houses constructed in the Lakewood Subdivision. On lots to the west and south of the district, the houses are representative of a tract development, with nearly uniform houses featuring less architectural detail. On lots to the north and east, there are additional modern style houses dating to the 1950s, but many have also been remodeled or reconstructed in the twenty-first century. The Parade of Homes site retains its historic appearance as a distinguishable district set among the surrounding neighborhoods. Houses The Lakewood Historic District is significant under Criterion A for its association with the 1955 Parade of Homes in Utah. It is also significant under Criterion C in the area of Architecture as it embodies the distinctive characteristics of both modern and traditional housing types and styles that were popularized by both contractor-designers and architects in the 1950s. As a historic district, the properties must be recognizable as an identifiable entity that consists of a concentration of interrelated buildings. To be considered a contributing resource in the historic district, a house must be able to convey its period of construction and architectural style, and it must be recognizable as a specific model home in the Lakewood Historic District. Location, design, materials, and workmanship are the most important aspects of integrity to retain. Enclosed carports, terraces, and courtyards are the most common alterations to the houses in the district. While these are character-defining features, they do not necessarily qualify a house as non-contributing. In general, a home must retain its original plan, exterior materials, fenestration pattern, and roof form to be considered contributing. Alterations that are characteristic of the period, type, and style of the house would also not necessarily qualify as non-contributing. 1590 East Lone Peak Drive The Bel Vista, Home No. 11, at 1590 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 1 and Photo 2) is a one-story, singlefamily, Contemporary style house (Salt Lake Tribune 1955a) It was one of two houses constructed by builder W. Reid Horne in the Lakewood site. The house is irregular in plan with an attached garage extending from the west end of the house The primary façade is asymmetrical with the front entry offcenter between the living space and the attached garage. The house is oriented facing north toward Lone Peak drive. The exterior of the garage and the west half of the house is clad in vertically oriented wood paneling and the eastern half of the house is brick, as is the end-wall chimney. The roof is front gabled with a very low pitch over both the house and a shed roof extension over the garage. The garage roof is parallel with the street while the north eave above the house is angled toward the northeast. Wood fascia rests on exposed beams in the gable ends and rafters are exposed below wide, overhanging, open eaves. There is one fixed sash, single-pane, rectilinear window in the north façade. Vegetation currently obscures any other 4 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State openings, and Salt Lake County Assessor photographs do not reveal the presence of additional windows in the north façade. Based on the Salt Lake County Assessor photograph circa 1960 and historic aerial imagery (Figure 1 and Figure 2), the primary façade and the plan of the house have not been significantly altered. No associated outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association and is a contributing resource in the historic district. 1598 East Lone Peak Drive The Modern Manor, Home No. 12, at 1598 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 3 and Photo 4) was constructed by Hyland Building company. It was constructed as a one-story, single-family, ranch type house. It is Lshaped in plan with a cross-gabled roof sheltering the house and the attached garage. The garage extends from the primary (north) façade with an entrance perpendicular to the house. The foundation is formed concrete and according to a profile of the house in the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram from June 4, 1955, “The home will be of brick construction with vertical redwood trim” (Jarrard 1955a). The house is presently clad in vertical board siding above a roman brick half-wall veneer along the primary façade of the house and the garage is clad in vertical board above a stone veneer half-wall. Originally, the house featured open, overhanging eaves with exposed rafters, characteristic of the Contemporary style; the gable ends have since been closed and clad with vinyl siding. The eaves have been boxed covered with vinyl soffit. The roof is covered in composite shingles. The entry is slightly recessed below the roof and a non-original front gable. The windows on the north façade are replacement horizontal one-by-one, sliding vinyl sash windows set just below the eave. The original windows illustrated in the historic lithograph of the house were a ribbon of casement windows. The original horizontal window opening, screened with vertical wood jalousie-like slats, remains in the north façade of the garage. Based the 1955 lithograph in the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram from June 4, 1955, and the Salt Lake County Assessor photograph circa 1960 (Figure 3 and Figure 4), alterations include installing the front gable above the entrance, closing and boxing the eaves and gable ends, and replacing the windows and doors in the principal façade. The plan does not appear to be changed and is without significant additions. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting; however, the alterations have diminished integrity of materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. The house is a non-contributing resource in the historic district. 1612 East Lone Peak Drive The Astron, Home No. 13, at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 5 and Photo 6), was constructed by the Paulson Brothers Construction Company. It is a single-family, one-story, ranch type house that is rectangular in plan with a side gabled roof and an attached garage extending from the west end of the house. In the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram from July 2, 1955, the house was materially described as, “A spacious brick veneer home with low pitch roof and modern clean lines…” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram, 1955a). The original brick veneer has been covered in stucco with decorative white quoins detailing the northwest corner. The continuous, single-pitch side gable roof was altered between 1960 and 1993 with a central upward expansion of the roof. The front entry is sheltered below a non-original, partial-width porch that is supported on three columns; the porch is integrated below the expansion of the north roof slope. The eaves are covered with vinyl fascia. The roof is covered with composite shingles. The principal façade faces north toward East Lone Peak Drive and is asymmetrical with an off-center entry and two sidelights, which is an alteration from the original single sidelight and entrance. To the west 5 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State of the entry is a tripartite, wood sash picture window, which appears to be original. Two windows are east of the entry: a one-over-one awning window with a diamond pattern in the narrow upper pane and a replacement one-by-one vinyl sash sliding window. Both windows are replacements. A broad interior brick chimney is slightly offset from the entry. Based on the 1955 lithograph (Figure 5) and Salt Lake County Assessor photographs from circa 1960 and 1993 (Figure 6 and Figure 7), the building has undergone several alterations to the degree that the original home is not readily discernable. Alterations include changes to the roof form, the application of stucco and decorative quoins over the original cladding, the replacement of the door and window in the principal façade, and the entry porch. A rear addition was added after 1958 (Utah Geological Survey 2021). The house retains integrity of location and setting. Alterations have diminished integrity of design, materials, workmanship, association, and feeling; it is a non-contributing resource in the historic district. 1613 East Lone Peak Drive The Cliff May, Home No.10, at 1613 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 7–Photo 9), was built by Bradford Construction Company and is a prefabricated house designed by builder, designer, and ranch promoter, Cliff May (Figure 8). The Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram said of the house 1 month prior to the 1955 Parade, The house features a massive outdoor living area surrounded on two sides by the window all entries to the master bedroom and interior living area. The third side is protected by the car-port garage combination…. The architectural design on the home provides a blend of indoor-outdoor freedom in harmony with formal or informal living. (Jarrard 1955b) The house is a single-family, one-story, Contemporary style ranch type house with a cross gabled roof. It is L-shaped in plan consisting of a wing parallel to the road and a prominent front gable extension. A detached garage stands in the aperture of the wings. The principal façade of the house faces south toward East Lone Peak Drive and consists of the gable end of the north-south oriented wing and the eave wall of the east-west oriented wing. The house stands on a poured concrete foundation and is clad in stone, board and batten, and vertical wood board. The roof has a low pitch characteristic of the Contemporary style and is covered with composite shingle. The eaves are closed with wood fascia and soffit, and the roof is covered with composite shingle. A tripartite opening is offset in the gable end with a glazed door and two vertical fixed sash windows of the same dimensions. A stone veneered, exterior chimney is adjoined to the east façade of the front gable wing. The entry is set into the ell of the house and is concealed from the street. The front courtyard obscures visibility of the street facing façades and is enclosed by a cast iron fence with stone pillars to match the exterior of the house. The two-bay detached garage is the most visible element of the house from the street and the front garden obscures visibility of the principal façade. The garage foundation is poured concrete (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955b). The exterior is covered with board and batten siding. The beams protrude from eaves and are closed with wood fascia and vinyl soffit. The roof is covered with composite shingle. The west wall of the west garage bay is open to the courtyard and supported with narrow undecorated pillars. The house reportedly was destroyed by fire and reconstructed; this was not able to be substantiated with historic research. Presently, the principal elevation of the house is obscured by the front courtyard and is not easily compared to the historic lithograph of the original Cliff May house. Alterations include closing the eaves of the garage with vinyl soffit, and when compared to the 1958 aerial image, the east-west wing appears to be extended. Because the house was reconstructed outside of the period of significance, it is a non-contributing resource in the historic district. 6 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State 1623 East Lone Peak Drive The Connecticut Yankee, Home No. 9, at 1623 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 10 and Photo 11), was constructed by Hyland Building Company and was described as “painstakingly finished a New England styled home with an aroma of sea air about it” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955c). The house is a one-story, single-family ranch type house with elements influenced by the Colonial Revival style. It is L-shaped in plan consisting of a wing parallel to the road housing the living space and a prominent front gable extension housing the attached garage. The foundation is poured concrete. The principal elevation of the house is clad with board-and-batten above a brick veneer half-wall and stone veneer in the entrance while the side façades of the house are clad in brick. The garage is clad in board and batten. The cross gable has a low pitch and features blind gablet dormers which appear to pierce the roof as extensions of the primary façade. A pent roof continues below the gable end of the garage. The roof pitch is covered with composite shingle. The eaves are open with the rafters exposed and ornamental knee brackets that postdate the house. A broad interior brick chimney rises from the roof ridge and contains five chimney pots. The entry is slightly recessed in the primary façade and sheltered by a projection between the right angle of the garage and a projecting picture window. A one-by-one vinyl window and a single wide sidelight flank the entry. A small gablet accentuates a replacement tripartite picture window east of the entrance façade. A replacement four-sash window set flush with the walls wraps the corner between the entry and the garage. Based on the 1955 lithograph and the Salt Lake County Assessor photograph circa 1960, the house was constructed as advertised, and the form and design of the house remain intact (Figure 9 and Figure 10). The fenestration pattern in the principal façade remains the same, but the original diamond muntin windows have been replaced. A small cupola was originally present at the ridge of the roof but has been removed and brackets have been added to the eaves. There have been no additions to the house; the original footprint remains intact. No outbuildings are present. Alterations have nominally diminished integrity of materials, but the house retains integrity of location, design, setting, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 1624 East Lone Peak Drive The original home at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive was a Contemporary style, one-story, single-family, prefabricated house known as the Ridgewood, Home No. 14 (Figure 11 and Figure 12) (Jarrard 1955c). It was demolished in 2019. The current house is a one-story New Traditional style house (Photo 12). The house is a non-contributing resource in the historic district. 1635 East Lone Peak Drive The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 13–Photo 17), was constructed by Red Robin Homes Inc. It is a one-story, single-family, Contemporary house. It is irregular in plan with an attached garage projecting from the center of the primary façade. The house was designed by local Salt Lake architect Stephen MacDonald. It was described as standing “ever so proudly on pilars [sic], scorning the traditional support of a foundation… glued together, but actually achieve integration through tension” and “wide open with patios and open courts comprising parts of the house area.” The Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram further elaborated of the design, Stephen MacDonald, Salt Lake architect, conceived the construction technique applied to these homes and brought in a group of experts in interior decoration, structural engineering and landscape design, to help bring them to reality. (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d) 7 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State A photograph which accompanied the above newspaper report captured at the rear of the house during construction, illustrates the post and beam method (Figure 13 and Figure 14). The exterior is clad with narrow vertical cedar slat siding with varying thickness to impart texture. The roof is ostensibly flat with a nearly imperceptible shallow pitch. It is supported with wide laminated structural beams which also act as fascia. Heavy bolts at junction points in the laminated beams indicate that the structure was not entirely joined with glue and tension. The eaves are open and overhang the house with widely spaced, exposed rafters over the entrance and closed with uniformly spaced tongue-and-groove wood soffit. The primary entry door is set back east of the garage and sheltered by the laminate beams that created a grid pattern brise soleil. It is surrounded by a window wall of fixed sash, single-pane windows. The window orientation, configuration, and design are a demonstration of the importance of nature and its unobscured viewing from living spaces integral to the design philosophy. West of the garage, laminated beams extend from the roofline above the interior courtyard in a rectangular grid pattern brise soleil. The courtyard itself is protected from street view with a semi-circular stucco privacy wall. This is a further tangible example of Stephen MacDonald’s intent to “bring the indoor out living into actual being” (Jarrard 1955d). The windows throughout are large and single pane. The rear façade contains a window wall with a single sliding glass door. Additionally, the windows that view the front courtyard are standard ribbon of the full wall variety and single pane. There are two alterations to the house that are not visible from the street. A portion of the roof brise-soleil was enclosed over the front courtyard after 1958 but is not evident from the street. In the rear of the house, the fascia and wall cladding indicate a terrace at the northwest corner of the house was later enclosed for additional living space. One addition has been made, which is an approximately 6-foot stucco privacy wall that is not connected to the original house and has not changed the original plan. This wall was not present in the 1958 aerial photograph of the neighborhood but is present in the early 1990s, according to the Salt Lake County Assessor photograph. There are no outbuildings on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association; it is a contributing resource in the historic district. 1649 East Lone Peak Drive The Cosmopolitan, Home No. 7, at 1649 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 18–Photo 20), was constructed by Stan Nelson Builders Supply Company (Jarrard 1955e). It is a one-story, single-family Contemporary style and type residence with an irregular plan. The house stands on a concrete slab foundation. The principal (south) façade is clad with horizontal, wood plank lattice mounted to furring leaving a void behind. The side and rear façades are clad in brick and wood panel. The roof is a broad, low pitch front gable and a flat roof extension from the primary façade sheltering the entrance and a carport. The support columns of the carport on the east side taper from top to bottom. The eaves are open and overhang the south façade with exposed beams. The eaves along the sides and rear are moderately overhanging and closed with wood soffit and fascia. The entry is recessed into the primary façade below the center of the gable roof. The entry features a full height window wall of fixed sash, single-pane windows with the entry door offset to the right. The east wing of the house projects south and has a full height window wall into the gable. Though seemingly characteristic of the style, the wall was originally an uninterrupted wall clad in brick which is also characteristic of the private street facing façades of Contemporary houses. An exterior brick chimney is adjoined to the east eave wall and has three terracotta chimney pots. Based on both the tax assessment photo from circa 1960 and an illustration in Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram (Figure 15 and Figure 16), the front façade did not originally have a window wall as previously described. The window wall is an alteration to the original design of the house; window walls are, however, characteristic of Contemporary style architecture. Despite the alteration and diminished 8 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State integrity of design, the house is still able to convey its style and period of construction. The Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram referred to a unique feature this way: “At the entry a planter will be half in the house and half out to carry the indoor-outdoor motif” (Jarrard 1955e). This feature was either not constructed or has not been retained. No additions have been made to the original plan. No outbuildings were observed. The house retains integrity of location, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 1650 East Lone Peak Drive Home No. 15, at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 21–Photo 23), is a one-story, single-family, Contemporary style and type house constructed by McKean Construction Company. It is irregular in plan with a broad, low-pitch, front-gable roof sheltering the residence and shed roof extension over the attached carport and garage. The house was featured in the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram on August 27, 1955, and was reportedly “designed and built with the idea of fluid space arrangement with one area flowing into the next… using a structural system of post-and-beam…” (Jarrard 1955f). Characteristic of the Contemporary style, the house was designed with a semi-private street facing elevation and three terraces integrating the interior of the house with the private exterior in the side and rear of the house. Clerestory windows on the front provide privacy from the street for the occupants. Yet a massive glass wall sweeping across the living area in the rear coordinates the indoor living area with the garden and terrace without interruption. (Jarrard 1955f) The principal elevation faces north onto East Lone Peak Drive and is asymmetrical in composition with the recessed entrance and fenestration flanked on either side by projecting volumes at the east and west ends. The entrance and fenestration are recessed below a sunscreen supported on exposed beams and clerestory windows continue upward to fill the gable end. The design exemplifies the Contemporary style with panelized sections of wood sash windows, walls clad with vertical wood plank siding, and an uninterrupted, stone veneered wall at its east end. The windows are fixed wood sash windows with two, one-by-one sliding windows A one-stall carport and one-car garage extend from the west end of the elevation. The shed roof extension that shelters the carport and garage features widely overhanging open eaves with covered rafters and exposed beams supported on posts. Based on the 1955 lithograph of the house (Figure 17) and the circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 18), the principal elevation has not been altered. No additions have been made to the original floor plan. No outbuildings were observed. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 1661 East Lone Peak Drive The Westward Ho, Home No. 6, at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 24) was constructed by Melvin H. Jensen (Figure 19) (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d; Jarrard 1955g). As it was constructed, the house was a one-story, single-family, Contemporary style and type house (Figure 20). It was Ushaped in plan with an interior courtyard in the east half of the house. A broad, low pitch front-gabled roof sheltered the house and an attached garage in the southeast corner of the house. The principal (south) elevation was asymmetrical in plan with an off-center, deeply recessed entrance between the garage and the living space. As it stands now, it is a one-and-a-half story, Millennium Mansion style house. Aerial imagery indicates the house may still be U-shaped in plan with a courtyard behind the side-gabled attached garage in the 9 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State east half of the house. The living space is within a front-gabled volume that features a series of lower front gables in the principal elevation. Though it would appear to be to be newly constructed, the house has reportedly undergone significant alteration; this is substantiated by Salt Lake County Assessor records, which indicate the construction date is 1955 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). Due to alterations to the house circa 2005, the original roof orientation, form, design, and style are no longer discernable; it is a non-contributing resource in the historic district. 1667 East Lone Peak Drive The Retreat, Home No. 5, at 1667 East Lone Peak Drive (Photo 25 and Photo 26) was constructed by Melvin H. Jensen. It is a single-family, one-story, Contemporary style and type house with a distinctive, dual pitch roof consisting of a flat roof over the northwest living space, courtyard entrance, and attached garage. A low pitch shed roof shelters the southeast living space and rises above the flat roof. The eaves are closed with aluminum soffit and fascia. The house is U-shaped in plan with a front courtyard, “enclosed, yet open, yards are highly representative of the latest trends in contemporary styling” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). Note that both The Retreat and adjacent Westward Ho at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive were built by Melvin H. Jensen and highly derivative of each other when originally constructed (Figure 21). As it was constructed, the principal façade visible from the street consisted of a pumice rock privacy wall enclosing the front courtyard with an integrated pumice rock planter and an adjacent carport (Jarrard 1955h). A pair of flush wood doors provide access into the courtyard. The house originally featured red wood trim and is currently clad in painted vertical boards of equal width. The vertical board siding has replaced or covered the pumice rock wall originally adjoining the privacy wall and the carport, but the west portion of the wall and integrated planter remain intact. The windows are not visible from the street and were not depicted in the 1955 lithographs. An interior brick chimney with three chimney pots rises from the shed roof of the southeast living space. Based on a circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 22), the most significant alteration since construction was the enclosure of the carport, which was originally open on three sides, into a onecar garage with modern overhead garage door. The principal façade has also been altered with the reduction of the pumice rock wall. Despite these alterations, the original form and plan of the house have been retained; it is still able to convey its style and period of construction. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 5465 South Fairoaks Drive The Sunny Dale, Home No. 4, at 5465 South Fairoaks Drive (Photo 27–Photo 29) was constructed by Dale Howell (Jarrard 1955i). It is a one-story, single-family, Contemporary style and type house. The attached garage extends from the northwest corner of the house and creates a blunt L-shaped plan. The house stands at the intersection of East Lone Peak and South Fairoaks Drive and is oriented southwestnortheast. The principal façade faces southwest and is clad in fieldstone and battened vertical wood panels. The side and rear façades are clad in brick. A butterfly roof shelters the north half of the house containing the garage and rear living space; a low pitch shed roof shelters the south living space. Over the principal façade the eaves slightly overhang the house and are closed with wood soffit and fascia with metal flashing. Along the side (northwest and southwest) façades, the eaves are nearly flush and closed with wood fascia with metal flashing. At the rear of the house, the eaves widely overhang the house and are open with exposed rafters. 10 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State On the primary façade, fieldstone is the dominant cladding material on either side of the wood paneled entrance. The entrance is slightly recessed in the façade and set back behind the garage. The entry door is a glazed with four horizontal panes. The windows are one-by-one, vinyl sash sliding windows, occupying only the upper quarter of the walls. The rear façade predominantly consists of a full-height window wall with single-pane, fixed sash windows. Two sliding glass doors provide access between the interior and the curvilinear concrete patio; one is an extension of the window wall. A broad, brick chimney spans between the interior and exterior living spaces at the southeast end of the house. Based on the 1955 lithograph and a circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 23 and Figure 24), the principal façade has not been significantly altered. Alterations have been made to the rear of the house to accommodate new entrances and changed room functions. The original form, plan, and design remain intact. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 5473 South Fairoaks Drive The Dude, Home No. 3, at 5743 South Fairoaks Drive (Photo 30 and Photo 31) was constructed by W. Reid Horne (Jarrard 1955j) and was referred to as a “California Colonial” with a 28-foot fireplace wall (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d) (Figure 25). It is a one-story, single-family, ranch type house that is L-shaped in plan with a cross gabled roof. The exterior is clad with stone veneer and boardand-batten siding. The eaves are open with exposed rafters and wood fascia closing the gable ends. The roof cladding is composite asphalt shingle. The principal (west) façade is dominated by an open carport and a closed garage in the front-gabled wing. The garage bay retains the original paneled and diamond patterned overhead garage door. Both bays are bordered with a distinctive trellis of dimensional wood in an “X” pattern. A full-width entry porch shelters the entrance and two one-by-one, sliding windows. The broad 28-foot fireplace interior chimney rises from the ridge of the side-gabled wing. Four chimney pots with irregular spacing are atop the chimney. Based on the circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph, the principal façade of the house has not been significantly altered (Figure 26). The house retains its original windows, doors, and garage door. Additions to the original plan are not evident from the street or aerial imagery. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 5476 South Fairoaks Drive The Dover, Home No. 16, at 5476 South Fairoaks Drive (Photo 32–Photo 34) was designed and constructed by Grant A. Muhlestein and was highlighted as a “near replica of the homes of Old England, featuring, however, all the modern devices that make life comfortable” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d; Jarrard 1955k). It is a one-story, single-family Colonial Revival style ranch type house. It is regular in plan with a side gabled roof. The house is positioned at the apex of the curve between East Lone Peak and South Fairoaks Drives, which allows for an especially elongated, rambling appearance. The exterior is clad with stone veneer and board-and-batten siding. The eaves are open with exposed rafters and closed in the gabled ends with wood verge boards. The roof is composite asphalt shingle The primary (northeast) façade consists of a dominant front gable projection at the south end, sheltered entry and shallow porch, and a diminutive front gable over the garage at the north end. There is a broad entry porch with a prominent picture window to the right of the door. The dominant gable projection is clad with board-and-batten and a faux half-timbering creates four bays. Three one-over-one windows are 11 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State off-center in the gable end and framed by three of the bays. Stone veneer distinguishes the sheltered entry and tripartite picture windows. The northwest façade features a distinctive set of six vents supported by a series of evenly spaced brackets. A stone veneered chimney rises from the roof ridge of the living space, and a low, broad hip roof cupola sits at the crest of the roof above the garage wing. Based on the 1955 lithograph (Figure 27) and a circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 28), the house is predominantly unaltered. A rear porch has been added, but no other significant additions have been made to the original plan. A small, detached shed has been added to the southeast end of the house. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 5483 South Fairoaks Drive The Geraldine, Home No. 2, at 5483 South Fairoaks Drive (Photo 35–Photo 37) was constructed by Richard Howell Construction Company (Jarrard 1955l). It is a single-family, one-story, ranch type house with a roughly L-shaped plan with a series of three stepped hip roof volumes (Figure 29). The roof is a low pitch cross-hip roof described as, “…a traditional hip roof, but pitched so low it won’t be recognized.” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). The exterior is clad in standard and stacked striated brick with sections of stucco on the south façade. The eaves overhang the house and are boxed with vinyl soffit. The roof is covered with composite asphalt shingle. The principal (west façade) is dominated by the attached one-car garage. The entry is set back, off-center, and sheltered below the middle hip roof section. A full-height, tripartite picture window is adjacent the entry. Two pairs of square one-by-one windows are set high in north end of the principal façade. A privacy wall extends from the southeast corner of the house toward the south. A brick interior chimney rises from the west slope of the middle hip roof. Based on a circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 30), the original windows have been replaced, but the original fenestration pattern remains intact. The original form, design, and plan of the house remain intact. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 5490 South Fairoaks Drive The Virginian Jr., Home No. 17, at 5490 South Fairoaks Drive (Photo 38 and Photo 39) was constructed by Glazier Construction and was described as an “Early American” design (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955e). It is a one-story, single-family Colonial Revival style ranch type dwelling (Figure 31). It is T-shaped in plan with a dominant side gabled roof parallel to South Fairoaks Drive and a perpendicular rear gabled attached garage extension parallel to East Winward Drive. It is clad with a red brick veneer and wood shingles on two bay windows. The roof is clad in composite asphalt shingles The eaves are open, yet tight to façades with exposed rafters. The primary (east) façade faces South Fairoaks Drive and features a partial width entry porch at grade. An off-center entry is sheltered below the porch and is trimmed in a decorative wood surround. The porch is supported on turned wood posts with a post-dating vinyl banister. There are three windows in the primary façade: one tripartite picture window under the porch south of the entry and two projecting gabled bay windows with vertical one-by-one, single pane, crank windows. In the south façade of the side-gabled wing, there is another picture window which is trimmed in a decorative wood surround. A brick interior end wall chimney rises from the south gable end. 12 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Based on the circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 32), some of the original windows have been replaced, but the original fenestration pattern has been retained. Additions have not altered the original plan. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, design, setting, workmanship, feeling, and association. It is a contributing resource in the historic district. 5493 South Fairoaks Drive The Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 South Fairoaks Drive (Photo 40–Photo 43) is a one-story, single-family Contemporary style and type house. It is irregular in plan with a distinctive flat roof featuring a monitor roof with windows oriented to the south. It was constructed by Capson Investment Co. and was declared “ultra-modernistic” by the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram. The reporter elaborated, Because the one bedroom has no outside windows and the hall is enclosed, the ‘clear story’ [clerestory] where one section of the outside roof is stepped higher than the other sectionprovides glareless light from outside into the bathrooms and halls. (Jarrard 1955m) The house is clad in vinyl siding, wood siding, and two types of stone veneer; the original stone veneer is on the primary (west) façade and the post-dating stone veneer is on the south façade of the garage. While the garage dominates the primary façade from Fairoaks Drive, this house is visible from many angles as a result of the corner lot orientation. The eaves are closed and tight to the façades with exposed beam ends below the monitor roof. Variant overhanging eaves or cantilevered roof sections are non-original and coincide with alterations. There are a series of bubble skylights in the southeast corner of the house. Two stone veneer walls, one original and one non-original, flank the projecting corner entry vestibule in the ell of the house and attached garage. The post-dating entrance vestibule confounds the original plan, pushes the entry outward, and turns the entry 90 degrees. A post-dating window wall was added to the south façade with a stucco clad exterior chimney. A privacy fence encloses an extension of the house to the southeast. As it was constructed, the home was L-shaped in plan with a carport extending from the west façade of the square house. The west façade was dominated by the broad, uninterrupted expanse of the stone veneered wall. The entrance was parallel with the west façade and sheltered below the carport. The south façade was panelized with a ribbon of small, square windows set just below the eave. A wood brise soleil extended beyond the flat roof to shade the windows. Based on 1958 aerial imagery (see Figure 1) and the circa 1960 Salt Lake County Assessor photograph (Figure 33 and Figure 34), there have been several alterations and additions to the house. The original post-supported, open carport was enclosed to create a one-car garage. Multiple additions have been added to the south and east façades, including the window wall and chimney previously described. The main entry was rotated 90 degrees and projected outward in a flat roof vestibule. The door now faces south instead of the original west. However, the original stone veneer on the west elevation remains intact, as does the clerestory in the monitor roof and the central core of the house. No outbuildings were observed on the property. The house retains integrity of location, setting, and feeling; however, the alterations have diminished integrity of design, materials, workmanship, and association. The house is a non-contributing resource in the historic district. 13 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Table 1. Homes of the 1955 Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Address Parcel Number Model Name/ Home No.* Style/Type Architect/Builder District Status 1590 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-129-008-0000 Bel Vista Home No. 11 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type W. Reid Horne Contributing 1598 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-129-009-0000 The Modern Manor Home No. 12 Ranch type Hyland Building Co. Non-contributing 1612 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-129-010-0000 The Astron Home No. 13 Ranch type Paulson Brothers Construction Company Non-contributing 1613 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-128-010-0000 The Cliff May Home No. 10 Contemporary style/ ranch type Cliff May/Bradford Construction Company Non-contributing 1623 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-128-011-0000 The Connecticut Yankee Home No. 9 Colonial Revival style/ranch type Hyland Building Co. Contributing 1624 East Lone Peak Drive† 22-16-129-011-0000 – New Traditional style Manford A. Shaw/ Shaw Construction Company Non-contributing 1635 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-128-012-0000 Red Robin 10 Home No. 8 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type Stephen MacDonald/ Red Robin Homes Inc. Contributing 1649 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-128-013-0000 The Cosmopolitan Home No. 7 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type Stan Nelson Builders Supply Company Contributing 1650 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-129-012-0000 – Home No. 15 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type McKean Construction Company Contributing 1661 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-128-014-0000 The Westward Ho Home No. 6 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type Melvin H. Jensen Non-contributing 1667 East Lone Peak Drive 22-16-128-015-0000 The Retreat Home No. 5 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type Melvin H. Jensen Contributing 5465 South Fairoaks Drive 22-16-128-016-0000 The Sunny Dale Home No. 4 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type Dale Howell Contributing 5473 South Fairoaks Drive 22-16-128-017-0000 The Dude Home No. 3 Ranch type W. Reid Horne Contributing 5476 South Fairoaks Drive 22-16-129-014-0000 The Dover Home No. 16 Colonial Revival style/ranch type Grant A. Muhlestein Contributing 5483 South Fairoaks Drive 22-16-128-018-0000 The Geraldine Home No. 2 Minimal Traditional style/ranch type Richard Howell Contributing 5490 South Fairoaks Drive 22-16-129-028-0000 The Virginian Jr. Home No. 17 Colonial Revival style/ranch type Harold Glazier Contributing 5493 South Fairoaks Drive 22-16-128-019-0000 The Lenai Home No. 1 Contemporary style/ Contemporary type Haines and Purhonen/ Capson Investment Co. Non-contributing * Salt Lake Tribune 1955 10 September:40 † The Ridgewood, Home No. 14, was originally constructed at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive; it was demolished in 2019. 8. Statement of Significance Applicable National Register Criteria (Mark “x” in one or more boxes for the criteria qualifying the property for National Register Listing.) ☒ A. ☐ B. Property is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history. Property is associated with the lives of persons significant in our past. 14 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property ☒ C. ☐ D. OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Property embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction or represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components lack individual distinction Property has yielded, or is likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history. Criteria Considerations (Mark “x” in all boxes that apply.) ☐ A. ☐ B. ☐ C. ☐ D. ☐ E. ☐ F. ☐ G. Owned by a religious institution or used for religious purposes Removed from its original location A birthplace or grave A cemetery A reconstructed building, object, or structure A commemorative property Less than 50 years old or achieving significance within the past 50 years Areas of Significance (Enter categories from instructions) Community Development and Planning Architecture Period of Significance 1955 Significant Dates 1955 Significant Person (Complete only if Criterion B is marked above.) n/a Cultural Affiliation n/a Architect/Builder Stephen MacDonald, architect Haines and Purhonen, architects Cliff May, architect/builder Bradford Construction Company, builder Hyland Building Company, builder 15 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Manford A. Shaw; Shaw Construction Company, builder Red Robin Homes Inc., builder Stan Nelson Builders Supply Company, builder McKean Construction Company, builder Melvin H. Jensen, builder Paulson Brothers Construction Company, builder Dale Howell, builder W. Reid Horne, builder Grant A. Muhlestein, builder Richard Howell Construction Company, builder Harold Glazier; Glazier Construction Company, builder, Capson Investment Company, builder Statement of Significance Summary Paragraph (Provide a summary paragraph that includes level of significance, applicable criteria, justification for the period of significance, and any applicable criteria considerations.) The Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District, located in Holladay, Salt Lake County, is significant at the local level under Criterion A in the area of Community Development and Planning for its association with the 1955 Parade of Homes in Salt Lake County. The Parade of Homes was created by the National Association of Home Builders as part of the National Home Week campaign in 1948. The parade was a marketing event promoting home ownership and the latest in housing design, construction methods, and products in fully furnished model homes. The earliest iterations of the consisted of individual homes at scattered locations, but the event evolved into single site developments featuring a collection of model houses in newly opened subdivisions. Of the earliest Parade of Homes sites consisting of contiguous model homes in Salt Lake County, the Lakewood Historic District retains the best historical integrity and is the most discernible, interrelated entity consisting of stylized model homes in a characteristic post–World War II subdivision. The Lakewood Historic District is also significant at the local level under Criterion C in the area of Architecture as a distinct concentration of houses constructed for a specific event and representative of the more architectural types and styles of the 1950s. The styles feature traditional or Colonial Revival– influenced ranch type houses, Contemporary style ranch type houses, and Contemporary style and type houses. Because of this the site is an identifiable entity that is distinguishable from the surrounding neighborhood with higher style renditions of these various styles and types. The period of significance is 1955, which is the year of the Parade of Homes event and the year the original 17 houses were constructed by local builders and architects as part of Site No. 1 or the Lakewood site of the 1955 Parade of Homes. 16 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NARRATIVE STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE (Provide at least one paragraph for each area of significance.) Criterion A Community Development and Planning Parade of Homes The Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District, located in Holladay, Salt Lake County, is significant at the local level under Criterion A in the area of Community Development and Planning for its association with the 1955 Parade of Homes in Salt Lake County. The 1955 Parade of Homes was the second annual event to showcase a small district of prospective model homes on a single development site as it featured 17 model homes in the newly opened Lakewood Subdivision. The Lakewood Historic District retains good historical integrity of the houses and setting, along with the character-defining features of post–World War II subdivision design, and it retains 15 of the 17 original model homes constructed by members of the Utah Home Builders Association. Of these, 11 of the model homes are predominantly unchanged and continue to embody the design concepts that were showcased in the 1955 parade event. Beginning in the late 1940s, families who had formerly lived in the urban areas of Salt Lake City moved to the rapidly developing subdivisions in Murray, Sandy, Millcreek, and Holladay (Sillitoe 1996:205). Former agricultural lands, estates, and vacant bench lands were purchased by contractors and builders and subdivided into lots for design-builds and prospective home sales. In the 1950s and 1960s, the population shifted from urban to suburban as the city became a place to work and the suburbs became a place to live. By 1960, the population of Salt Lake City had declined by 7 percent while the Salt Lake County population increased by 20 percent (Sillitoe 1996:207–208). By 1948, 30 new subdivisions were under development in and around Salt Lake City with homes financed by G.I. loans, Federal Housing Administration loans, Building and Loan Association programs, or conventional bank loans (Salt Lake Tribune 1948a). The location and design of postwar subdivisions were heavily influence by the federally sponsored and insured financing programs that have shaped the character of the suburban development and growth across the United States. In 1940, the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) published a 28-page bulletin titled Successful Subdivisions, illustrating the standards for using the agency’s mortgage insurance. the agency required a competent professional plan and suggested it include good streets of prescribed width, well-shaped building lots with driveways, protection of the neighborhood from through traffic, and use of protective covenants. (McAlester 2015:69) In addition to these standards, the FHA recommended that new subdivisions be constructed with easy access to the newly developing major arterial roadway systems but that they have no or few direct access points from these arterials. The Lakewood Historic District is representative of this general trend of suburbanization in the design of its curvilinear street pattern and location that is near both the Van Winkle Expressway and 5600 South but does not have direct access to either. The district was constructed south of the developed edge of Salt Lake City in the first of seven Lakewood subdivisions in southwest Holladay and is presently bounded by the Van Winkle Expressway, 5600 South, Woodcrest Drive, and Lakewood Drive. In early 1955, Lee Capson of Capson Investment and Manford Shaw purchased the 100-acre site and developed the Lakewood Subdivision in Holladay (Salt Lake Tribune 1955b). The partners planned for 135 new houses to be constructed in the Lakewood Subdivision At least 35 houses were constructed in the Lakewood 17 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Subdivision in 1955, including the 17 houses constructed as speculative model homes to be showcased in the annual Parade of Homes event (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021; Salt Lake Tribune 1955c). Most of the extant 135 houses in the Lakewood Subdivision (84 percent) were originally constructed between 1955 and 1959. The Lakewood Historic District stands apart from the surrounding houses in the subdivision as more stylistic architectural representations of the types and housing design that characterized the late 1950s (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). As a marketing event aimed at promoting homeownership and consumerism, in general the Parade of Homes 1 concurrently influenced the development and growth of suburban areas across the United States. The National Association of Home Builders created the National Home Week campaign and debuted the first Parade of Homes event in 1948 (Dodd 2015: 385). The parade showcased the latest in housing design, construction methods, and products in fully furnished model homes. The event acted as a live and in-person fair-style tour to both market homes, appliances, and other domestic features of houses designed and built by specific builders. Typically, the event occurred at a single development featuring several model houses, but in some instances several non-contiguous tracts were open for inspection (Dodd 2009:14). The National Association of Home Builders attributes the first parade of homes to the Salt Lake Home Builders Association who “created the first-of-its kind, coordinated exhibition for the public of newly built homes” in 1946 (National Association of Home Builders 2016). In its earliest iteration, in March 1946, the event was referred to as Home Building Week and was sponsored by the chamber of commerce, builders and material suppliers, banks, contractors, and furnishing dealers. The objective of the event was to “Stabilize building cost; minimize inflation” in the face of a 6000 housing unit shortage and an estimated 12,000 veterans set to return to Salt Lake County in the summer of that year (Salt Lake Tribune 1946). In Utah, the first annual Home Week event associated with the National Home Week campaign and sponsored by the National Association of Home Builders occurred September 5 to 12, 1948. As the immediate postwar period was plagued by a shortage in building materials and lack of available housing for servicemen and their families, the 1948 Home Week aimed to showcase the accomplishments of the building industry and the possibilities of home ownership: An acutely home-conscious nation has a special reason this week to glance back ward over a postwar era littered with housing problems and then forward for a bracing view of block after block of new houses. Each of these countless new dwellings represents that dream cherished by every American–a home to own…This week will be dedicated to emphasizing the contribution home ownership makes toward better citizenship and consequent strengthening of the nation. Simultaneously it will demonstrate accomplishments of the building industry in battling the critical housing shortage after the war and will show what is being done to meet the continuing need for homes. (Salt Lake Tribune, 1948a) The event featured a selection of 18 representative houses primarily constructed in one of Salt Lake County’s 30 or more new subdivisions (Salt Lake Tribune 1948a, 1948b). The annual event was advertised as Utah Home Week, Utah Home Show, National Home Week, or some combination of these in Salt Lake County newspapers between 1948 and 1953 (Daily Herald 1953). In 1954, it was first referred to as Parade of Homes and after this time the name became synonymous with the event (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1954). The 1954 Parade of Homes may also have been the first year the event included a district-like concentration of adjacent model homes on a model street in one subdivision 1 The origin of the term “Parade of Homes” remains unclear. Used to refer to an array of open houses, the term was used as early as 1938 in Oakland, California, and in 1940 in Hartford, Connecticut (Harford Courant 1940; Oakland Tribune 1938). In association with the National Home Week campaign, the term was used in 1948 in Indianapolis, Indiana (Indianapolis Star 1948). 18 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State constructed by several members of the Utah Home Builders Association. This inaugural year featured 22 model homes in Mt. Olympus Acres on South Diana Way and East Hermes Circle (Deseret News and Telegram 1954). The following year was a record year for the national Parade of Homes event, as local building industries organized 200 parades across the United States (Dodd 2015:386). In Salt Lake City, the newspapers declared, “Utah is observing National Home Week with another huge Parade of Homes” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). For the first year ever, the 1955 Parade of Homes featured two Parade sites catering to different income brackets in the developing suburbs of Murray and Holladay, with a total of 30 houses on display. Like the previous year, the 1955 event also included a raffle that awarded a “giveaway” house in the Murray parade site to the winner and a lot in the Holladay site to the runner-up (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955f). In contemporary newspaper advertisements, the Holladay Parade site was identified as Site No. 1, the Lakewood site, or as “5600 South just west of Highland Drive.” This site consisted of 17 houses of a higher design and price point, “Site No. 1, located on 56th South Street below Highland Drive, will contain the latest in styling of homes in the over-$15,000 bracket.” (Salt Lake Tribune 1955d). The Murray site was identified as Site No. 2 and Murraydale. It was more affordably priced below $15,000 and consisted of 13 houses on East 6240 South (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955g). The lower bracket home site was in response to the 1954 Parade of Homes, which consisted of homes that were generally too expensive for the average home buyer. An advertisement for the event in a Murray newspaper explained the price difference in more detail, The No. 1 site includes houses averaging $30,000 in cost with many exceeding $40,000 and some on which no specific value has been placed. The No. 2 site in Murray will display houses principally in the $12,000 to $16,000 bracket, although some will be on either side of those figures. (Murray Eagle 1955) These figures were reflected in real estate advertisements for the houses. In October 1955, the house built by Melvin Jensen at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive was as priced at $38,000 (Salt Lake Tribune 1955e). The house at 1650 East Lone Peak constructed by McKean Construction Co. was projected to cost over $50,000; among the highest-price point in the Parade that year (Jarrad 1955e). Conversely, the raffle giveaway house at the Murraydale site was valued at $18,000 (Salt Lake Tribune 1955f). The model homes in the Lakewood Historic District were among the first houses to be constructed in the Lakewood Subdivision in 1955. The historic district represents a distinctive, interrelated entity with model homes embodying the latest trends in design and materials that were showcased in the 1955 Parade of Homes in a characteristic post–World War II subdivision featuring along the curvilinear intersection of East Lone Peak and South Fair Oaks Drive. The surrounding streets are similarly designed, with curving streets without sidewalks, consistent setbacks, and spacing between houses, but the use of wood cladding and stone and more stylized designs distinguish the model homes of the Lakewood Historic District from the surrounding houses constructed in the Lakewood Subdivision. Criterion C Architecture The Parade of Homes Lakewood Historic District is significant under Criterion C in the area of Architecture at the local level because it displays the distinctive characteristics of residential building types and architectural styles in the Post–World War II and mid-twentieth century period, as well as a variety of design and construction methods. As it was advertised, the 1955 Parade of Homes sites exhibited “the most modern trends in house design and construction” and “provincials, smacking of the 19 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State authentic” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). The Lakewood historic district retains a collection of Colonial Revival style ranch houses, Contemporary style ranch houses, and Contemporary style and type houses (see Table 1). The houses are indicative of architectural housing types and styles that were popularized by both contractor-designers and architects in the 1950s. The early ranch house was introduced in the 1930s and 1940s. During World War II, the shortage of construction materials, federal programs for war industry–related housing, and financing restrictions of the FHA caused these early ranches to be smaller and with modest amounts of traditional detailing derived from Colonial Revival styles (McAlester 2015:600–602). The demand for housing immediately after World War II resulted in a residential housing boom. Simultaneously, lending programs through the FHA discouraged implementing modernist designs resulting in a proliferation of small, traditionally styled ranch houses (Carter and Gross 1988; McAlester 2015). After World War II, the FHA lifted mandates limiting the size and style of its financing programs. Construction materials were replenished, and the automobile created the opportunity for suburban development with wide, sprawling lots. Under these conditions, the rambling ranch house developed in the mid-twentieth century maximizing façade width and often elongated by an attached garage or carport (McAlester 2015:602). The accessibility to automobiles, affordable lots in agricultural fields converted to subdivisions, and distribution of ranch house plans in popular magazines resulted in the proliferation of the ubiquitous ranch house across the United States. In the 1950s and 1960s, the ranch was the most popular house type constructed throughout the country. The ranch house offered a modern interior designed around a private, family-oriented lifestyle with a conservative traditional exterior. This compromise made the ranch house a preferred model for buildings and lenders in the post-World War II era over the dramatic designs of emerging modern styles. Aided by designs published in popular magazines such as House Beautiful and Better Homes and Garden, ranch houses were commonly designed and constructed by building contractors. Concurrently, modernist designs emerged in the Contemporary building type and style. The type is characterized by open plans, large window walls, and angular shapes (Carter and Gross 1988). Contemporary houses were concerned with the interior spaces and their relationship with the outdoors. Contemporary houses commonly conceal front courtyards, gardens, and interior spaces with recessed entrances, broad windowless wall surfaces, and screen fencing. Unlike earlier houses defined by the applied details characteristic to a style, Contemporary houses are characterized by their lack of ornamentation and an indoor-outdoor quality achieved through window walls, courtyards, and terraces that integrate living spaces with the exterior landscape features (McAlester 2015:630). The style originated in the Usonian homes of Frank Lloyd Wright in the late 1930s and was popularized amongst architects in the United States between 1945 and 1965 (McAlester 2015:632–646). Contemporary houses that reflect the type and style were more likely to be architect designed (McAlester 2015:603). However, these works influenced the suburban contractor-designed houses that applied the Contemporary style to a traditional ranch type house (Carter and Gross 1988). Examples of Colonial Revival influence, or traditional ranch houses include: • The Connecticut Yankee at 1623 East Lone Peak Drive • The Dover at 5476 South Fairoaks Drive • The Virginian Jr. at 5490 South Fairoaks Drive Examples of Modern or Contemporary style ranch houses include: • The Bel Vista at 1590 East Lone Peak Drive • The Modern Manor at 1598 East Lone Peak Drive 20 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property • The Aston at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive • The Cliff May at 1613 East Lone Peak Drive • The Ridgewood at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive • The Dude at 5473 South Fairoaks Drive • The Geraldine at 5483 East Lone Peak Drive OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Examples of Contemporary style and type houses include: • The Red Robin 10 at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive • The Cosmopolitan at 1649 East Lone Peak Drive • House No. 15 at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive • The Westward Ho at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive • The Retreat at 1667 East Lone Peak Drive • The Sunny Dale at 5465 South Fairoaks Drive • The Lenai at 5493 South Fairoaks Drive The 1955 Parade of Homes improved upon the preceding generation of houses with designs centered around “livability” focusing on “room arrangement in relation to each other have been improved, with an emphasis on efficiency for the housewife, and spaciousness within limits of the house size” (Salt Lake Tribune 1955c). Another overarching theme in the design of the 1955 Parade of Homes was “indooroutdoor living” with integrated courtyards and patios, The outdoor-indoor theme is predominant in most home building over the country today and the homes of Mr. Jensen and many of the other builders in the Parade of Homes show clever and unusual approaches to the problem of bringing the outside in and vice versa. (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d) Wood was used in interior and exterior treatments, “wood sidings lend exterior distinction to houses, while wood paneling gives a mellow warmth to home interiors.” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955h). The interiors featured wood with matching wallpaper, paint, and finishes to match in “natural forest hues” ranging from white, cream, and yellow to green, red, and brown (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955h). Each of the model homes in the Lakewood Historic District was constructed by a member of the Utah Home Builders Association. However, the historic district represents a collection of prefabricated homes, builder-designed homes, and architect-designed homes. At least two of the houses constructed in district were prefabricated: The Ridgewood at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive and the Cliff May house at 1613 East Lone Peak Drive. At the time of the event, the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram noted that, “Pre-fabs and semi-pre-fabs have attained the status of luxury housing with elaborate factory constructed homes as Manford Shaw’s ‘The Ridgewood’ and Bradford Construction Co.’s two ‘Cliff May Homes’” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). Cliff May was a Southern California home builder and designer was influential in the proliferation of the ranch house (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955b; McAlester 2015:603). In the preceding decade, May had promoted the ranch house through Sunset magazine, published in California. In 1946, Sunset published a supporting magazine, Western Ranch Houses, which was written by May and editorial staff and featured plans and drawings illustrating how to build new ranch houses based on Spanish Colonial 21 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State houses. The magazine was highly successful and was reprinted and distributed to a broader national audience (McAlester 2015:603). In 1955, May inspected the Parade of Homes sites shortly before the event and noted that “this unusual display of homes should build a great deal of enthusiasm for the principle of home ownership.” (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955b). At least two of the model homes, both Contemporary style and type examples, were designed by Salt Lake City architects. Haines and Purhonen Architects designed the Lenai at 5493 South Fairoaks Drive. The home was described as “ultra-modernistic” and was designed for privacy and to cater to its setting on “a corner lot with south and west frontages. To insure [sic] privacy and to eliminate late evening sun glare, the architects faced the house west and moved the living area–indoor and outdoor–to the rear.” (Jarrard 1955m) The partnership between David C. Haines and Arne R. Purhonen operated in the midtwentieth century, between 1954 and 1965; they were prolific designers of a distinctive modern architecture throughout Utah. The firm designed numerous churches, office buildings, schools, and at least one shopping center. Each of these buildings demonstrated the ideals and aesthetics of modernism, incorporating materials such as brick, concrete, and laminated beams with flat roofs, projecting eaves, and distinctive window walls. Stephen MacDonald and a consortium of experts in interior decoration, structural engineering, and landscape design collaborated on the Red Robin 10 at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive. MacDonald is credited with bringing together V. Douglas Snow, artist; Arthur Munsey, structural engineer; and Richard Hatch, landscape designer to complete the Red Robin home: “The house is an integrated area, designed to bring the indoor-outdoor living into actual being. All rooms have floor to ceiling glass doors which lead into decks, courts, and private garden and play areas” (Jarrard 1955c). The home was also constructed on pillars instead of a traditional foundation and without the use of nails, using only glue and tension (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). A Salt Lake City native, MacDonald studied engineering at the University of Utah and architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduating in 1939 (Salt Lake Tribune 1990). MacDonald initially worked as an industrial engineer in New York before returning to Salt Lake City to form an architectural practice. In the 1950s, he became a professor at the University of Utah School of Architecture, which became known for its progressive and modernist faculty (Francis 2009). He was most influenced by his experiences outdoors and his work limited separation between the indoors and outdoors rather than creating a protective barrier between them (Francis 2009). In 1954, MacDonald wrote of the future of residential architecture in The Builder: Magazine of the Utah Home Builders, One thing is certain, there is a serious need to examine the present set of conditions to determine whether or not our emotional and social needs are being satisfied…present structures have become so box-like in room concept, so confining in their relation to surrounding gardens, that personal imaginative expression by the inhabitants are retarded to a point of almost nonexistence. (MacDonald 1954) In that year, MacDonald’s students designed new residential forms that were to be economical and “encourage family life and visual freedom.” The students designed six study models that were uniquely modern in their use of materials, construction technique, form, and plan and design intent to allow “a more intimate relationship” with the site and landscaping. Conclusion Of the three earliest Parade of Homes sites in Salt Lake County consisting of contiguous model homes, the Lakewood Historic District is most discernable as a unique, interrelated entity of concept and design. It retains the highest degree of integrity with 11 of 17 model homes contributing to the district. The model 22 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State homes are both builder- and architect-designed residences and represent the array of traditional or Colonial Revival–influenced ranch type houses, Contemporary style ranch type houses, and Contemporary style and type houses that were characteristic of the late 1950s. The Lakewood Historic District also exhibits a greater number of character-defining features in post–World War II subdivision design than surrounding neighborhoods that contribute to the overall setting. In comparison, the Parade sites at Mt. Olympus Acres and Murraydale have experienced a greater degree of impacts to historical integrity on the extant houses. At the Mt. Olympus Acres site, approximately 10 of 22 model homes no longer retain integrity to be recognizable as one of the original model homes due to additions to the original plan, altered roof forms, or replaced cladding. Further, the Mt. Olympus sites exhibit less of the characteristic suburban design elements. Similarly, the Murraydale site in the 1955 Parade of Homes has experienced a greater degree of alteration, as approximately five of the original 13 model homes have modified roof forms, replacement cladding, and modified window openings. Further the Murraydale site is not as distinguishable as a cohesive entity on a linear block that is both bookended and interrupted by houses constructed after the Parade of Homes event. 23 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State 9. Major Bibliographical References Bibliography (Cite the books, articles, and other sources used in preparing this form.) Carter, Thomas and Peter Gross 1988 Utah’s Historic Architecture, 1847–1940. University of Utah Press: Salt Lake City, Utah. Updated version available at https://issuu.com/utah10/docs/architectural_guide_booklet. Accessed July 29, 2021. Daily Herald 1953 Builders Group Plans Home Week Observance. Daily Herald 18 September:8. Provo, Utah. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1954 Utah Home Builders Association Welcomes You to Americas Most Beautiful Parade of Homes. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 17 September:38. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955a Spacious House Features Two Baths, Terrace. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 2 July:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955b Famous Builder Visits Site of ’55 Home Parade. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 2 September:27. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955c Hyland Homes of Enchantment. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 9 September:45. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955d Parade Homes Different. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 9 September:45. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955e Parade of Homes to Feature ‘Virginian, Jr.’ Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 25 June:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955f U.S. Home Week Begins for Utah, Nation. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 10 September:9. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955g Home Week Proclaimed. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 10 September:9. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955h Match Woods to Walls. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 9 September:45. Salt Lake City, Utah. Dodd, Samuel 2009 Merchandising the Postwar Model House at the Parade of Homes. Unpublished M.A. thesis. University of Texas at Austin. 2015 Parade of Homes: Salesmanship and Post-war American Housing Industry. Journal of Design History 28(4):385–404. Oxford University Press on behalf of Design History Society. Francis, Lewis 2009 Stephen L. Macdonald (1914-1990)–Innovative Architect in Heritage Vol. 43 No. 4: 6. Utah Heritage Foundation: Salt Lake City, Utah. 24 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Hartford Courant 1940 Every Home in the Parade of Homes for All is Electrically Equipped. Hartford Courant 29 September:34. Harford, Connecticut. Indianapolis Star 1948 Parade of Homes. Indianapolis Star 6 September:10. Indianapolis, Indiana. Jarrard, Jack E. 1955a ‘Modern Manor’ Among Homes in 1955 Parade. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 4 June:8. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955b Cliff May Offers Giant Area for ‘Outdoor Living.’ Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 13 August:8. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955c Woman’s Touch Marks Roomy Home in ‘Parade’. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 16 July:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955d Indoor, Outdoor Living Merge in Parade Home. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 18 June:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955e Indoor-Outdoor Living Plan Features Home. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 6 August:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955f Parade Home Features Idea of ‘Fluid Space.’ Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 27 August:6. Salt Lake City, Utah 1955g Plans for First Home in ’55 Parade Released. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 7 May:6. Salt Lake City, Utah 1955h Latin-American Touch Adds Beauty to Home. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 30 July:6. Salt Lake City, Utah 1955i Howell Home Features New-Type Plan. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 23 July:6. Salt Lake City, Utah 1955j Luxury Comfort Featured in ‘Parade’ Home. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 20 August:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955k Early American Home Feature of 1955 Parade. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 11 June:8. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955l Spacious House Featured for Growing Family. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 21 May:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955m Lots of Privacy Offered by ‘Parade’ Home. Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 14 May:6. Salt Lake City, Utah. MacDonald, Stephen L. 1954 Designs for the future: What is ahead for us in architecture? In The Builder: Magazine of the Utah Home Builders, Spring 1954. Available at: http://alumni.cap.utah.edu/2019/10/01/ stephen-macdonald-former-architecture-professor-and-his-students-from-1953-1954/. Accessed July 29, 2021. 25 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State McAlester, Virginia Savage 2015 A Field Guide to American Houses: the Definitive Guide to Identifying and Understanding America’s Domestic Architecture. Alfred A. Knopf, New York. Murray Eagle 1955 Home Parade Begins Saturday. Murray Eagle 8 September: front page. Murray, Utah. National Association of Home Builders 2016 Parade of Homes Turns 70, Gets Better With Age. NAHB Now: The News Blog of the National Association of Home Builders 18 July. Available at https://nahbnow.com/ 2016/07/parade-of-homes-turns-70-gets-better-with-age/. Accessed July 29, 2021. Oakland Tribune 1938 A Parade of Homes. Oakland Tribune 30 January:28. Oakland, California. Salt Lake County Assessor 2021 Interactive Parcel Map. Available at: https://slco.org/assessor/. Accessed on July 20, 2021. Salt Lake Tribune 1946 Building Industry Leaders Sound Inflation Warning. Salt Lake Tribune, 8 February:8. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1948a Home Week Finds Building Boom. Salt Lake Tribune, 5 September:55. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1948b See Exclusive Millbrook Heights. Salt Lake Tribune, 5 September:56. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955a Congratulations to the Builders. Salt Lake Tribune 14 September:31. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955b Capson’s Story: Painting to Building. Salt Lake Tribune 22 May:31. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955c It’s Home Week Time in Utah, Sept. 10 to 18. Salt Lake Tribune 10 September:37. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955d Home Parade Sets Double Price Range. Salt Lake Tribune 10 September:38. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955e Distinctive Mel Jensen Rambler in 1955 Parade of Homes. Salt Lake Tribune 2 October:30. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1955f Home Contest Rules Set. Salt Lake Tribune 10 September:41. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1990 S.L. Macdonald, Architect, Dies. 22 January:26. Salt Lake City, Utah. Sillitoe, Linda 1996 A History of Salt Lake County. Utah State Historical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. Utah Geological Survey 2021. UGS Aerial Imagery Collection. Image AAL_12V-196. Available at: https://geodata.geology. utah.gov/imagery/. Accessed July 29, 2021. 26 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Previous documentation on file (NPS): ☐ preliminary determination of individual listing (36 CFR 67) has been requested ☐ previously listed in the National Register ☐ previously determined eligible by the National Register ☐ designated a National Historic Landmark ☐ recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey # ☐ recorded by Historic American Engineering Record # ☐ recorded by Historic American Landscape Survey # Primary Location of additional data: ☐ State Historic Preservation Office ☐ Other State agency ☐ Federal agency ☐ Local government ☐ University ☐ Other Name of Repository: Historic Resources Survey Number (if assigned): 10. Geographical Data Acreage of Property: 5.20 acres (Use either the UTM system or latitude/longitude coordinates) Latitude/Longitude Coordinates (decimal degrees) Datum if other than WGS84: (enter coordinates to 6 decimal places) Latitude: 40.651901 Longitude: -111.846478 Latitude: 40.651570 Longitude: -111.846478 Latitude: 40.651569 Longitude: -111.844626 Latitude: 40.651231 Longitude: -111.844627 Latitude: 40.651231 Longitude: -111.843701 Latitude: 40.651693 Longitude: -111.843701 Latitude: 40.651980 Longitude: -111.843711 Latitude: 40.652292 Longitude: -111.844119 Latitude: 40.652366 Longitude: -111.844345 Latitude: 40.652367 Longitude: -111.845956 Latitude: 40.651900 Longitude: -111.845960 Or 27 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State UTM Reference ☐ NAD 1927 or ☐ NAD 1983 1. Zone: Easting: Northing: 2. Zone: Easting: Northing: 3. Zone: Easting: Northing: 4. Zone: Easting: Northing: Verbal Boundary Description (Describe the boundaries of the property.) From the NW corner of the legal parcel for 1590 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-008-0000) south 120 feet to the SW corner of said parcel; thence 86 feet east to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the SW corner of the legal parcel for 1598 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-009-0000) continuing 84 feet east to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the SW corner of the legal parcel for 1612 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-010-0000) 100 feet east to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the SW corner of the legal parcel at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-011-0000) continuing feet 88 east to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the SW corner of the legal parcel 1650 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-012-0000) 125 feet east to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the SW corner of legal parcel for 1664 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-013-0000) 5 feet east to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the SW corner of the legal parcel for 5476 South Fairoaks Drive to the point 28 feet east along the boundary of said parcel to the point which corresponds with the NW corner of the legal parcel for 5490 South Fairoaks Drive (no. 22-16-129-028-0000) continuing south 127 feet to the SE corner of said parcel; thence eastward 210 feet across South Fairway Drive and an additional 105 feet to the SE corner of the legal parcel for 5493 South Fairway Drive (no. 22-16-128-019-0000) continuing 85 feet north to the NE corner of said parcel; thence from the SE corner of the legal parcel for 5483 South Fairway Drive (22-16-128-018-0000) continuing 83 feet to the NE corner of said parcel; thence from the SE corner of the legal parcel for 5473 South Fairoaks Drive (22-16-128-017-0000) continuing 106 feet northwesterly to the NE corner of said parcel; thence from the SE corner of the legal parcel for 5465 South Fairoaks Drive (no. 22-16-128-016-0000) continuing northwesterly 120 feet to the NE corner of said parcel; thence from the NE corner of the legal parcel for 1667 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-128015-0000) continuing northwesterly 107 feet to the NW corner of said parcel; thence from the NE corner of the legal parcel for 1661 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-128-014-0000) continuing west to the NW corner of said parcel; thence from the NE corner of the legal parcel for 1649 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-128-013-0000) continuing 83 feet west to the SE corner of said parcel; thence from the NW corner of the legal parcel for 1635 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-128-012-0000) continuing west 83 feet to the NE corner of said parcel; thence from the NE corner of the legal parcel for 1623 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-128-011-0000) continuing 83 feet west to the NW corner of said parcel; thence from the NE corner of the legal parcel for 1613 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-128-010-0000) continuing west 83 feet to the NW corner of said parcel and continuing 120 feet south to the SW corner of said parcel; thence from the centerline of East Lone Peak Drive continuing 144 feet west; thence 26 feet south to return to the NW corner of legal parcel for 1590 East Lone Peak Drive (no. 22-16-129-008-0000). See Map 1 for detailed boundary and coordinates. Boundary Justification (Explain why the boundaries were selected.) The historic district boundary encompasses the legal tax parcels of the 17 resources based on Salt Lake County Assessor data for the 1955 Parade of Homes. The boundary was delineated along the outside tax parcel boundaries and includes the adjacent streets of East Lone Peak Drive and South Fairoaks Drive. Tax Parcel information accessed July 29, 2021. 28 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State 11. Form Prepared By Name/Title: Megan Daniels; Trevor Mark Organization: SWCA Environmental Consultants Street & Number: 257 East 200 South, Suite 200 City or Town: Salt Lake City State: Utah e-mail: megan.daniels@swca.com; trevor.mark@swca.com Telephone: (801) 322-4307 Date: January 20, 2022 Zip Code: 84111 Additional Documentation Submit the following items with the completed form: • Maps: A USGS map or equivalent (7.5 or 15 minute series) indicating the property’s location. • Sketch map for historic districts and properties having large acreage or numerous resources. Key all photographs to this map. • Additional items: (Check with the SHPO, TPO, or FPO for any additional items.) 29 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property MAPS Map 1. Location map with coordinates. 30 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Map 2. District map. 31 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property PHOTOGRAPHS OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Submit clear and descriptive photographs. The size of each image must be 1600x1200 pixels (minimum), 3000x2000 preferred, at 300 ppi (pixels per inch) or larger. Key all photographs to the sketch map. Each photograph must be numbered and that number must correspond to the photograph number on the photo log. For simplicity, the name of the photographer, photo date, etc. may be listed once on the photograph log and doesn’t need to be labeled on every photograph. Photo Log Name of Property: Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District City or Vicinity: Holladay County: Salt Lake County State: Utah Photographer Megan Daniels Date Photographed July 12, 2021 32 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 1 of 43. The Bel Vista, Home No. 11, at 1590 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing southeast. Photo 2 of 43. The Bel Vista, Home No. 11, at 1590 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing southwest. 33 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 3 of 43. The Modern Manor, Home No. 12, at 1598 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing south. Photo 4 of 43. The Modern Manor, Home No. 12, at 1598 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing southwest. 34 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Photo 5 of 43. The Astron, Home No. 13, at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing southeast. Photo 6 of 43. The Astron, Home No. 13, at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing southwest. 35 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 7 of 43. The Cliff May, Home No. 10, at1613 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing north. Photo 8 of 43. The Cliff May, Home No. 10, at 1613 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation close-up on west wing. Camera facing north. 36 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 9 of 43. The Cliff May, Home No. 10, at 1613 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northwest. Photo 10 of 43. The Connecticut Yankee, Home No. 9, at 1623 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northwest. 37 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 11 of 43. The Connecticut Yankee, Home No. 9, at 1623 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northeast. Photo 12 of 43. New house at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing north. 38 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 13 of 43. The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northeast. Photo 14 of 43. The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation entry. Camera facing northwest. 39 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 15 of 43. The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation privacy wall. Camera facing northwest. Photo 16 of 43. The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive, north (rear) elevation. Camera facing southeast. 40 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Photo 17 of 43. The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation, detail on entry. Camera facing northwest. Photo 18 of 43. The Cosmopolitan, Home No. 7, at 1649 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northwest. 41 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 19 of 43. The Cosmopolitan, Home No. 7, at 1649 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northeast. Photo 20 of 43. The Cosmopolitan, Home No. 7, at 1649 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing north. 42 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 21 of 43. Home No. 15, at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing southeast. Photo 22 of 43. Home No. 15, at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation close-up. Camera facing southeast. 43 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 23 of 43. Home No. 15, at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive, north elevation. Camera facing south. Photo 24 of 43. The Westward Ho, Home No. 6, at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive, south elevation. Camera facing north. 44 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 25 of 43. The Retreat, Home No. 5, at 1667 East Lone Peak Drive, southwest elevation. Camera facing northeast. Photo 26 of 43. The Retreat, Home No. 5, at 1667 East Lone Peak Drive, southwest elevation, close up of privacy wall. Camera facing northeast. 45 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 27 of 43. The Sunny Dale, Home No. 4, at 5465 Fairoaks Drive, southwest elevation. Camera facing northeast. Photo 28 of 43. The Sunny Dale, Home No. 4, at 5465 Fairoaks Drive, southwest elevation. Camera facing east. 46 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 29 of 43. The Sunny Dale, Home No. 4, at 5465 Fairoaks Drive, northeast elevation. Camera facing south. Photo 30 of 43. The Dude, Home No. 3, at 5473 Fairoaks Drive, west elevation. Camera facing east. 47 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 31 of 43. The Dude, Home No. 3, at 5473 Fairoaks Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northeast. Photo 32 of 43. The Dover, Home No. 2, at 5476 Fairoaks Drive, northeast elevation. Camera facing southwest. 48 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 33 of 43. The Dover, Home No. 2, at 5476 Fairoaks Drive, northeast elevation. Camera facing south. Photo 34 of 43. The Dover, Home No. 2, at 5476 Fairoaks Drive, northwest elevation. Camera facing southeast. 49 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 35 of 43. The Geraldine, Home No. 2, at 5483 Fairoaks Drive, west elevation. Camera facing east. Photo 36 of 43. The Geraldine, Home No. 2, at 5483 Fairoaks Drive, south and west elevations. Camera facing northeast. 50 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Photo 37 of 43. The Geraldine, Home No. 2, at 5483 Fairoaks Drive, west elevation. Camera facing southeast. Photo 38 of 43. The Virginian Jr., Home No. 17, at 5490 Fairoaks Drive, east elevation. Camera facing west 51 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Photo 39 of 43. The Virginian Jr., Home No. 17, at 5490 Fairoaks Drive, south and west elevations. Camera facing northeast. Photo 40 of 43. The Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 Fairoaks Drive, west elevation. Camera facing northeast. 52 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 41 of 43. The Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 Fairoaks Drive, west elevation. Camera facing east. Photo 42 of 43. The Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 Fairoaks Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northeast. 53 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Photo 43 of 43. The Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 Fairoaks Drive, south elevation. Camera facing northeast. 54 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State FIGURES Figure 1. Aerial view of the Lakewood site in 1958. Aerial imagery from Utah Geological Survey, AAL 12V-196 (2021). Figure 2. The Bel Vista, Home No. 11, at 1590 East Lone Peak Road circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 55 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 3. The Modern Manor, Home No. 12, at 1598 East Lone Peak Drive (Jarrard 1955a). Figure 4. The Modern Manor, Home No. 12, at 1598 East Lone Peak Drive circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 56 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 5. The Astron, Home No. 13, at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955a). Figure 6. The Astron, Home No. 13, at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 57 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 7. The Astron, Home No. 13, at 1612 East Lone Peak Drive circa 1993 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). Figure 8. The Cliff May, Home No.10, at 1613 East Lone Peak Drive (Jarrard 1955b). 58 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 9. The Connecticut Yankee, House No. 9, at 1623 East Lone Peak Drive (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955c). Figure 10. The Connecticut Yankee, House No. 9, at 1623 East Lone Peak Drive, circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 59 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property Figure 11. The Ridgewood, Home No. 14, formerly at 1624 East Lone Peak, circa 1960 (Jarrard 1955c). Figure 12. The Ridgewood, Home No. 14, formerly at 1624 East Lone Peak Drive, circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 60 OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 13. The Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive photographed during construction; note the post-and-beam construction (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955d). Figure 14. Illustration of the Red Robin 10, Home No. 8, at 1635 East Lone Peak Drive (Jarrard 1955c). 61 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 15. Lithograph of the Cosmopolitan, Home No. 7, at 1649 Lone Peak (Jarrard 1955e). Figure 16. Circa 1960 photograph of the Cosmopolitan, Home No. 7, at 1649 East Lone Peak Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 62 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 17. Illustration of Home No. 15, at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive (Jarrard 1955f). Figure 18. Home No. 15, at 1650 East Lone Peak Drive, circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 63 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 19. Illustration of the Westward Ho, Home No. 6, at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive (Jarrard 1955g). Figure 20. Circa 1960 photograph of the Westward Ho, Home No.6, at 1661 East Lone Peak Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 64 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 21. Illustration of the Retreat, Home No. 5, at 1667 East Lone Peak Drive (Jarrard 1955h). Figure 22. Circa 1960 photograph of the Retreat, Home No. 5, at 1667 East Lone Peak Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 65 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 23. Illustration of the Sunny Dale, Home No. 4, at 5465 South Fairoaks Drive (Jarrard 1955i). Figure 24. Illustration of the Sunny Dale, Home No. 4, at 5465 South Fairoaks Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 66 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 25. Illustration of the Dude, Home No. 3, at 5473 South Fairoaks Drive (Jarrard 1955j). Figure 26. Circa 1960 photograph of the Dude, Home No. 3, at 5473 South Fairoaks Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 67 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 27. Illustration of the Dover, Home No. 16, at 5476 South Fairoaks Drive (Jarrard 1955k). Figure 28. The Dover, Home No. 16, at 5476 South Fairoaks Drive circa 1960 (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 68 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 29. Illustration of the Geraldine, Home No. 2, at 5483 South Fairoaks Drive (Jarrard 1955l). Figure 30. Circa 1960 photograph of the Geraldine, Home No. 2, at 5483 South Fairoaks Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 69 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 31. Illustration of the Virginian Jr., Home No. 17, at 5490 South Fairoaks Drive (Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram 1955e). Figure 32. Circa 1960 photograph of the Virginian Jr., Home No. 17, at 5490 South Fairoaks Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 70 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Figure 33. Illustration of the Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 South Fairoaks Drive (Jarrard 1955m). Figure 34. Circa 1960 photograph of the Lenai, Home No. 1, at 5493 South Fairoaks Drive (Salt Lake County Assessor 2021). 71 NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District Name of Property OMB No. 1024-0018 Salt Lake County, Utah County and State Property Owner information: (Complete this item at the request of the SHPO or FPO.) Name: Multiple Owners Address: City or Town: State: Utah Telephone/email: Zip code: Paperwork Reduction Act Statement: This information is being collected for applications to the National Register of Historic Places to nominate properties for listing or determine eligibility for listing, to list properties, and to amend existing listings. Response to this request is required to obtain a benefit in accordance with the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended (16 U.S.C. 460 et seq.). Estimated Burden Statement: Public reporting burden for this form is estimated to average 100 hours per response including time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining data, and completing and reviewing the form. Direct comments regarding this burden estimate or any aspect of this form to the Office of Planning and Performance Management. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, 1849 C. Street, NW, Washington, DC. 72 Board of State History Meeting Agenda Thursday, January 20, 2022 - 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm To be held virtually, via Zoom Public attendees: please RSVP Alycia Rowley at aaldrich@utah.gov for a Zoom link 12:00 pm – Welcome – Molly Cannon Introduce new Board members Tara Beresh and Ignacio Garcia Introduce Axel Ramirez attending as a public member, awaiting Senate appointment SHARE: Open and Public Meeting Act Statement for Virtual Meeting – Molly Cannon 12:10 pm - ACTION: Approval of November 18, 2021 Board of State History Meeting Minutes – Molly Cannon 12:12 pm - Reminder to Complete Annual Conflict of Interest Form and Oath of Office - Alycia Rowley 12:15 pm - Public comment 12:25 pm – SHARE AND DISCUSSION: Department update – Jill Love and Kat Potter 12:40 pm – SHARE: Utah State Historical Society Committee - David Rich Lewis ● Call for potential Fellows and Honorary Life Members - Jed Rogers 12:50 pm - Communications Strategy Committee - Spencer Hall/staff 1:00 pm – Preservation and Archaeology Committee update – David Richardson ● ACTION: Approval of the National Register Nominations for Historic Places – Cory Jensen ○ Summary of Nominations ○ University Neighborhood Historic District Additional Documentation ○ Provo Community Congregational Church ○ Taylorsville LDS Ward Meetinghouse ○ Morgan Historic District ○ Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District 2:00 pm - BREAK 2:15 pm – Director discussion and updates - Jennifer Ortiz ● ● ● ● ● ● Invitation to Participate on Board of State History Committees ACTION: Strategic Planning update ○ Creation of Strategic Planning Committee SHARE: 2022 Legislative Session update--strategy, contacting reps etc. SHARE: Utah250 ○ SHARE: Peoples of Utah Revisited SHARE: State history conference update SHARE: Update on collections move FEEDBACK: Suggestions on April 2022 retreat? 3:00 pm – Adjourn 4/18/22, 7:00 AM State of Utah Mail - National Register Weekly List 04/15/2022 TENNESSEE, SHELBY COUNTY, Richards, Newton Copeland, House, 975 Peabody Ave., Memphis, OT84003709, REMOVED, 4/12/2022 UTAH, SALT LAKE COUNTY, Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District, East Lone Peak and South Fairoaks Drs., Holladay, SG100007561, LISTED, 4/11/2022 VERMONT, WINDHAM COUNTY, Governor Hunt House, 322 Governor Hunt Rd., Vernon, SG100007573, LISTED, 4/11/2022 VIRGINIA, FAIRFAX COUNTY, Mount Vernon Enterprise Lodge #3488-Pride of Fairfax County Lodge #298, 7809 Fordson Rd., Alexandria vicinity, SG100007613, LISTED, 4/14/2022 WEST VIRGINIA, HAMPSHIRE COUNTY, West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and the Blind Dairy Barn, 199 Depot St., Romney, SG100007605, LISTED, 4/15/2022 WEST VIRGINIA, OHIO COUNTY, Wheeling Warehouse Historic District (Boundary Increase), Roughly bounded by Main, 20th, and east side of Market Sts., and Wheeling Cr., Wheeling, BC100007606, BOUNDARY INCREASE APPROVED, 4/14/2022 WEST VIRGINIA, PRESTON COUNTY, Terra Alta First United Methodist Church, 301 West State Ave., Terra Alta, SG100007611, LISTED, 4/15/2022 WEST VIRGINIA, TUCKER COUNTY, Buxton and Landstreet Company Store, 571 Douglas Rd., Thomas, SG100007612, LISTED, 4/15/2022 WISCONSIN, FOND DU LAC COUNTY, Winnebago Cheese Company, 233 West Division St., Fond du Lac, SG100007575, LISTED, 4/11/2022 Key to Prefix Codes: AD - Additional documentation BC - Boundary change (increase, decrease, or both) FD - Federal DOE property under the Federal DOE project FP - Federal DOE Project MC - Multiple cover sheet MP - Multiple nomination (a nomination under a multiple cover sheet) https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?ik=76f70e1a09&view=pt&search=all&permthid=thread-f%3A1730179037775493539&simpl=msg-f%3A17301790377… 4/6 SPENCER J. COX Governor Jennifer Ortiz Director Utah Division of State History DEIDRE M. HENDERSON Lieutenant Governor February 22, 2022 Jill Remington Love Executive Director Department of Cultural and Community Engagement TO: Ms. Joy Beasley National Register of Historic Places Mail Stop 7228 1849 C St, NW Washington, D.C. 20240 FROM: Cory Jensen, National Register Coordinator, Utah State Historic Preservation Office RE: Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District National Register of Historic Places nomination Ms. Beasley, The submission contains a signed true and correct copy of the National Register of Historic Places nomination form for the Parade of Homes Lakewood Site Historic District, Salt Lake County. Photographs are embedded in the nomination form and TIF image files will be submitted, along with any required full sets of documents once normal submission procedures continue. Should you have any questions, please contact me at coryjensen@utah.gov. Thank you, J. Cory Jensen Enclosures: 1 NRHP nomination form with attached physical signature page Digital images (TIF image files will be submitted at a later date) 1 Physical transmission letter Physical Signature Page, with original signature Other: Comments: 17 0 Please ensure that this nomination receives substantive review Property owners Property owners who object MPS/MPDF Cover name: NPS Grant Fund: Other: 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov SPENCER J. COX Governor DEIDRE M. HENDERSON Lieutenant Governor Jennifer Ortiz Director Utah Division of State History April 18, 2022 Jill Remington Love Executive Director Department of Cultural and Community Engagement MAYOR ROBERT DAHLE HOLLADAY CLG 4580 SOUTH 2300 EAST HOLLADAY, UT 84117 Dear Mayor Dahle: We are pleased to inform you that the historic district listed below, nominated by the Utah Historic Preservation Review Board and the Utah State Historic Preservation Officer, was officially listed on the National register of Historic Places by the National Park Service on April 11, 2022: PARADE OF HOMES LAKEWOOD SITE HISTORIC DISTRIC, HOLLADAY CITY Listing in the National Register is intended to provide recognition of a property's significance. A major benefit of listing on the National Register is the availability of tax credits for qualified restoration work along with other financial incentives that are intended to encourage preservation of our historic buildings. Please contact Cory Jensen at 801/245-7242, or by e-mail at coryjensen@utah.gov if you have any questions or if we may be of assistance to you. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov SPENCER J. COX Governor Jennifer Ortiz Director Utah Division of State History DEIDRE M. HENDERSON Lieutenant Governor Jill Remington Love Executive Director Department of Cultural and Community Engagement November 22, 2021 MAYOR ROBERT DAHLE HOLLADAY CLG 4580 SOUTH 2300 EAST HOLLADAY, UT 84117 Dear Mayor Dahle: We are pleased to inform you that the historic district listed below will be considered by the State Historic Preservation Review Board for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places: PARADE OF HOMES LAKEWOOD SITE HISTORIC DISTRIC, HOLLADAY CITY The National Register of Historic Places is the federal government's official list of historic properties worthy of preservation. Listing on the National Register provides recognition and assists in preserving our Nation's heritage. Listing of a property provides recognition of its historic significance and assures protective review of federal projects that might adversely affect the character of the historic property. If the district is listed on the National Register, tax credits for rehabilitation and other beneficial provisions may apply. Listing in the National Register does not place limitations on the property by the federal or state government. Public visitation rights are not required of owners. The government will not attach restrictive covenants to the property or seek to acquire them. One of your responsibilities as a Certified Local Government (CLG) is to review pending National Register nominations of properties within your community. This is required, in part, to detect any errors in fact, but also to provide local insight or knowledge concerning the property. Please have your historic preservation commission review the enclosed draft nomination and return the enclosed review form with the appropriate signatures. We would appreciate hearing back from you prior to the board meeting. You are invited to attend the virtual Utah State Historic Preservation Review Board meeting at which the nomination will be considered. The Board will meet on Thursday, Jan. 20, 2022 at 1:00 PM, which can be accessed on Zoom at: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/7352004394 Meeting ID: 735 200 4394 Should you have any questions about this nomination before the meeting, please contact Cory Jensen of the Historic Preservation Office at coryjensen@utah.gov Sincerely, Enclosure Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov RIGHTS OF OWNERS TO COMMENT AND/OR OBJECT TO LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Owners of private properties nominated to the National Register have an opportunity to concur with or object to listing in accord with the National Historic Preservation Act and 36 CFR 60. Any owner or partial owner of private property who chooses to object to listing may submit, to the State Historic Preservation Officer, a notarized statement certifying that the party is the sole or partial owner of the private property and objects to the listing. Each owner or partial owner of private property has one vote regardless of the portion of the property that the party owns. If a majority of private property owners object, a property will not be listed. However, the State Historic Preservation Office shall submit the nomination to the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places for a determination of eligibility of the property for listing in the National Register. If the property is then determined eligible for listing, although not formally listed, Federal agencies will be required to allow for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to have an opportunity to comment before the agency may fund, license, or assist a project which will affect the property (see below). If you choose to object to the listing of your property, the notarized objection must be submitted to Don Hartley, State Historic Preservation Officer, 300 S. Rio Grande Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84101, before the Utah Board of State History meets to consider the nomination. Other comments regarding the nomination of this property should also be directed to Mr. Hartley prior to the meeting date. A copy of the nomination and information on the National Register and the Federal and State tax provisions are available from the above address on request. RESULTS OF LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER Eligibility for Federal tax provisions: If a property is listed in the National Register, certain Federal tax provisions may apply. The Tax Reform Act of 1986 revised the historic preservation tax incentives authorized by Congress in the Tax Reform Act of 1976, the Revenue Act of 1978, the Tax Treatment Extension Act of 1980, the Economic Recovery Act of 1981, and Tax Reform Act of 1984, and as of January 1, 1987, provides for a 20 percent investment tax credit with a full adjustment to basis for the “substantial rehabilitation” of historic commercial, industrial, and rental residential buildings. (The former 15 percent and 20 percent Investment Tax Credits (ITCs) for rehabilitations of older commercial buildings are combined into a single 10 percent ITC for commercial or industrial buildings built before 1936.) The Tax Treatment Extension Act of 1980 provides Federal tax deduction for charitable contributions for conservation purposes of partial interests in historically important land areas or structures. Whether these provisions are advantageous to a property owner is dependent upon the particular circumstances of the property and the owner. Because the tax aspects outlined above are complex, individuals should consult legal or professional counsel or the appropriate local Internal Revenue Service office for assistance in determining tax consequences. For further information on certification requirements, please refer to 36 CFR 67. Eligibility for State tax provisions: S. B. No. 42 passed during the 1993 General Session of the Utah State Legislature created a state income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic (i.e., National Register listed) residential buildings, either owner-occupied or rental. The credit is 20% of the cost of rehabilitation work totaling more than $10,000. All of the proposed rehabilitation work must meet the Secretary of the Interior’s “Standards for Rehabilitation” and must be pre-approved by the State Historic Preservation Office. Rules implementing these tax provisions are still being developed. Contact the Historic Preservation Office for more information. Consideration in planning for Federal, federally licensed and federally assisted projects: Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 requires that Federal agencies allow for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to have an opportunity to comment on all projects affecting historic properties listed in the National Register. For further information, please refer to 36 CFR 800 or contact the Regulatory Assistance section of the Division of State History. Consideration in issuing a surface coal-mining permit: In accordance with the Surface Mining and Control Act of 1977, there must be consideration of historic values in the decision to issue a surface coal-mining permit where coal is located. For further information, please refer to 30 CFR 700 et. seq. Qualification for Federal or State grants for historic preservation when available: Presently, limited funding may be available through the Certified Local Government program. Direct grants to property owners are also occasionally available. For information about possible grants, contact the Office of Preservation Utah Division of State History. National Register--Benefits and Restrictions What is the National Register? The National Register of Historic Places is the official federal list of properties that are significant in American history, architecture, archeology, and engineering. What sites in Utah are on the National Register? All types of sites and properties are represented -- from mansions to prehistoric pit houses, limekilns to LDS tithing offices, suspension bridges to rock art sites. In Utah there are over 1000 individual sites and over 50 historic and archeological districts containing several thousand additional sites. A complete listing of National Register sites in Utah can be obtained from the Office of Historic Preservation. Why would someone list their property on the National Register? While listing on the National Register is primarily an honorary recognition of the historic or architectural significance of a property, owners also list their buildings to qualify for federal and/or state rehabilitation tax credits or grants, when available. Listing on the National Register can also help educate the public and change a community's perception of its historic and cultural resources. Does listing limit an owner's property rights? Listing in the National Register does not interfere with a private property owner's right to alter, manage or dispose of the listed property. The owner is not required to restore or maintain the property or open it to the public. Local preservation ordinances, where present, may have some implication for a building owner. What are the requirements for listing? OR Is my house eligible? To be eligible for the National Register, a building must: (1) be at least 50 years old, (2) retain its architectural integrity [A rule of thumb: Would the original owner still recognize the building?], and (3) be significant. This significance can be national, state-wide, or even local, but must fall within at least one of the following categories: (A) association with important events, (B) association with significant persons, (C) architectural significance, or (D) archeological significance. Who can nominate properties to the National Register? Any interested person can research and nominate any property to the National Register. The legal owner has the right to object to, and prevent, the listing of their private property. What is the process? Research and document the property (call and ask for the Intensive Level Survey/Research guide) and submit current photos of the property with your early research results for a preliminary review. Next, prepare the National Register nomination form using the results of your research and documentation and the review suggestions. Coordinate with the local historic preservation commission, if one is present in your area. The completed nomination is then presented to the Board of State History for review. With their approval, it is then submitted to the National Park Service in Washington, DC for a final review. The staff of the Office of Historic Preservation is available to review and direct your research and nomination at any time -- consult with them early. The entire nomination process usually takes about six months. Is there money available for restoration? Limited matching grants are occasionally available for the preservation of properties listed on the National Register -- contact the Office of Preservation in April to see if grants will be available that year. We can also provide information about the federal and state rehabilitation investment tax credits and direct you to other possible funding sources, as well as providing technical preservation or maintenance information. Where do I go for National Register forms, bulletins, answers, etc.? Contact: Cory Jensen or Chris Hansen Office of Historic Preservation Utah Division of State History 300 S. Rio Grande Street Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1182 Phone 801/245-7225 Our website: heritage.utah.gov National Register website: www.cr.nps.gov/nr/index.htm SPENCER J. COX Governor DEIDRE M. HENDERSON Lieutenant Governor Jennifer Ortiz Director Utah Division of State History November 22, 2021 Jill Remington Love Executive Director Department of Cultural and Community Engagement Dear Property Owner: We are pleased to inform you that the historic district listed below, in which your building is located, will be considered by the State Historic Preservation Review Board for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places: PARADE OF HOMES LAKEWOOD SITE HISTORIC DISTRIC, HOLLADAY CITY The National Register of Historic Places is the federal government's official list of historic properties worthy of preservation. Listing on the National Register provides recognition and assists in preserving our Nation's heritage. Listing of a property provides recognition of its historic significance and assures protective review of federal projects that might adversely affect the character of the historic property. If the property is listed on the National Register, tax credits for rehabilitation and other beneficial provisions may apply. Listing on the National Register does not place limitations on the property by the federal or state government. Public visitation rights are not required of owners. The government will not attach restrictive covenants to the property or seek to acquire them. Enclosed please find a notice that explains, in greater detail, the results of listing in the National Register. It also describes the rights and procedures by which an owner may comment on or object to listing on the National Register. You are invited to attend the virtual Utah State Historic Preservation Review Board meeting at which the nomination will be considered. The Board will meet on Thursday, Jan. 20, 2022 at 1:00 PM which can be accessed on Zoom at: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/7352004394 Meeting ID: 735 200 4394 Should you have any questions about this nomination before the meeting, please contact Cory Jensen of the Historic Preservation Office at coryjensen@utah.gov. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Enclosures 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov RIGHTS OF OWNERS TO COMMENT AND/OR OBJECT TO LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Owners of private properties nominated to the National Register have an opportunity to concur with or object to listing in accord with the National Historic Preservation Act and 36 CFR 60. Any owner or partial owner of private property who chooses to object to listing may submit, to the State Historic Preservation Officer, a notarized statement certifying that the party is the sole or partial owner of the private property and objects to the listing. Each owner or partial owner of private property has one vote regardless of the portion of the property that the party owns. If a majority of private property owners object, a property will not be listed. However, the State Historic Preservation Office shall submit the nomination to the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places for a determination of eligibility of the property for listing in the National Register. If the property is then determined eligible for listing, although not formally listed, Federal agencies will be required to allow for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to have an opportunity to comment before the agency may fund, license, or assist a project which will affect the property (see below). If you choose to object to the listing of your property, the notarized objection must be submitted to Don Hartley, State Historic Preservation Officer, 300 S. Rio Grande Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84101, before the Utah Board of State History meets to consider the nomination. Other comments regarding the nomination of this property should also be directed to Mr. Hartley prior to the meeting date. A copy of the nomination and information on the National Register and the Federal and State tax provisions are available from the above address on request. RESULTS OF LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER Eligibility for Federal tax provisions: If a property is listed in the National Register, certain Federal tax provisions may apply. The Tax Reform Act of 1986 revised the historic preservation tax incentives authorized by Congress in the Tax Reform Act of 1976, the Revenue Act of 1978, the Tax Treatment Extension Act of 1980, the Economic Recovery Act of 1981, and Tax Reform Act of 1984, and as of January 1, 1987, provides for a 20 percent investment tax credit with a full adjustment to basis for the “substantial rehabilitation” of historic commercial, industrial, and rental residential buildings. (The former 15 percent and 20 percent Investment Tax Credits (ITCs) for rehabilitations of older commercial buildings are combined into a single 10 percent ITC for commercial or industrial buildings built before 1936.) The Tax Treatment Extension Act of 1980 provides Federal tax deduction for charitable contributions for conservation purposes of partial interests in historically important land areas or structures. Whether these provisions are advantageous to a property owner is dependent upon the particular circumstances of the property and the owner. Because the tax aspects outlined above are complex, individuals should consult legal or professional counsel or the appropriate local Internal Revenue Service office for assistance in determining tax consequences. For further information on certification requirements, please refer to 36 CFR 67. Eligibility for State tax provisions: S. B. No. 42 passed during the 1993 General Session of the Utah State Legislature created a state income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic (i.e., National Register listed) residential buildings, either owner-occupied or rental. The credit is 20% of the cost of rehabilitation work totaling more than $10,000. All of the proposed rehabilitation work must meet the Secretary of the Interior’s “Standards for Rehabilitation” and must be pre-approved by the State Historic Preservation Office. Rules implementing these tax provisions are still being developed. Contact the Historic Preservation Office for more information. Consideration in planning for Federal, federally licensed and federally assisted projects: Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 requires that Federal agencies allow for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to have an opportunity to comment on all projects affecting historic properties listed in the National Register. For further information, please refer to 36 CFR 800 or contact the Regulatory Assistance section of the Division of State History. Consideration in issuing a surface coal-mining permit: In accordance with the Surface Mining and Control Act of 1977, there must be consideration of historic values in the decision to issue a surface coal-mining permit where coal is located. For further information, please refer to 30 CFR 700 et. seq. Qualification for Federal or State grants for historic preservation when available: Presently, limited funding may be available through the Certified Local Government program. Direct grants to property owners are also occasionally available. For information about possible grants, contact the Office of Preservation Utah Division of State History. National Register--Benefits and Restrictions What is the National Register? The National Register of Historic Places is the official federal list of properties that are significant in American history, architecture, archeology, and engineering. What sites in Utah are on the National Register? All types of sites and properties are represented -- from mansions to prehistoric pit houses, limekilns to LDS tithing offices, suspension bridges to rock art sites. In Utah there are over 1000 individual sites and over 50 historic and archeological districts containing several thousand additional sites. A complete listing of National Register sites in Utah can be obtained from the Office of Historic Preservation. Why would someone list their property on the National Register? While listing on the National Register is primarily an honorary recognition of the historic or architectural significance of a property, owners also list their buildings to qualify for federal and/or state rehabilitation tax credits or grants, when available. Listing on the National Register can also help educate the public and change a community's perception of its historic and cultural resources. Does listing limit an owner's property rights? Listing in the National Register does not interfere with a private property owner's right to alter, manage or dispose of the listed property. The owner is not required to restore or maintain the property or open it to the public. Local preservation ordinances, where present, may have some implication for a building owner. What are the requirements for listing? OR Is my house eligible? To be eligible for the National Register, a building must: (1) be at least 50 years old, (2) retain its architectural integrity [A rule of thumb: Would the original owner still recognize the building?], and (3) be significant. This significance can be national, state-wide, or even local, but must fall within at least one of the following categories: (A) association with important events, (B) association with significant persons, (C) architectural significance, or (D) archeological significance. Who can nominate properties to the National Register? Any interested person can research and nominate any property to the National Register. The legal owner has the right to object to, and prevent, the listing of their private property. What is the process? Research and document the property (call and ask for the Intensive Level Survey/Research guide) and submit current photos of the property with your early research results for a preliminary review. Next, prepare the National Register nomination form using the results of your research and documentation and the review suggestions. Coordinate with the local historic preservation commission, if one is present in your area. The completed nomination is then presented to the Board of State History for review. With their approval, it is then submitted to the National Park Service in Washington, DC for a final review. The staff of the Office of Historic Preservation is available to review and direct your research and nomination at any time -- consult with them early. The entire nomination process usually takes about six months. Is there money available for restoration? Limited matching grants are occasionally available for the preservation of properties listed on the National Register -- contact the Office of Preservation in April to see if grants will be available that year. We can also provide information about the federal and state rehabilitation investment tax credits and direct you to other possible funding sources, as well as providing technical preservation or maintenance information. Where do I go for National Register forms, bulletins, answers, etc.? Contact: Cory Jensen or Chris Hansen Office of Historic Preservation Utah Division of State History 300 S. Rio Grande Street Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1182 Phone 801/245-7225 Our website: heritage.utah.gov National Register website: www.cr.nps.gov/nr/index.htm SPENCER J. COX Governor DEIDRE M. HENDERSON Lieutenant Governor Jennifer Ortiz Director Utah Division of State History April 18, 2022 Jill Remington Love Executive Director Department of Cultural and Community Engagement Dear Historic Property Owner: We are pleased to inform you that the historic district listed below, nominated by the Utah Historic Preservation Review Board and the Utah State Historic Preservation Officer, was officially listed on the National register of Historic Places by the National Park Service on April 11, 2022: PARADE OF HOMES LAKEWOOD SITE HISTORIC DISTRIC, HOLLADAY CITY Listing on the National Register is intended to encourage preservation as well as provide recognition of a property's significance. A major benefit of listing on the National Register is the availability of tax credits for qualified restoration work. If your property is a contributing building within the district, then you may be eligible. We would be pleased to assist you with the application process should you wish to apply. Please contact Amber Anderson at 801/245-7277, or amberanderson@utah.gov for more information on the tax credits. If you have any other questions regarding the National Register or if we may be of assistance to you, please contact Cory Jensen at 801/245-7242, or coryjensen@utah.gov. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov For the best experience, open this PDF portfolio in Acrobat X or Adobe Reader X, or later. Get Adobe Reader Now! |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6xxtzde |



