Garber House (other)
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Garber House (other)
Garber House may refer to: * Garber House (Los Angeles, California), a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument * Garber House (Goshen, New Hampshire), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Sullivan County, New Hampshire * Garber House (Woodinville, Washington), located at the highest point in King County, Washington {{disambig ...
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Garber House (Los Angeles, California)
The Garber House in Los Angeles, California, is an English Tudor Revival building by architect Herbert A. Linthwaite, AlA that was built in 1922 and listed as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 2007. The Cultural Heritage Commission found the building "embodies the distinguishing characteristics of an architectural type specimen, inherently valuable for a study of a period style or method of construction" as an example of Tudor Revival residential architecture in the Hollywood area. Linthwaite is noted for inventing a type of construction method for concrete buildings in the 1920s: the "hollow concrete wall." Possessing exclusive rights to build with this system, Linthwaite used this method in several buildings in Los Angeles during this time period. Design The primary façade facing the street is asymmetrically composed. It includes an off-center arched vestibule and groupings of triple casement windows. The roof is a single dominant front gable with half-timbered verg ...
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Garber House (Goshen, New Hampshire)
The Garber House is a historic house on Lempster Coach Road in Goshen, New Hampshire. Built about 1835, it is one of a cluster of plank-frame houses in the rural community, which at one time had an unusually fine Greek Revival entry surround. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on June 21, 1985. Description and history The Garber House stands on more than in rural southern Goshen, on the west side of Lempster Coach Road, about south of its junction with New Hampshire Route 31. It is a -story wooden structure, with a gabled roof, clapboarded exterior, and central chimney. The walls are formed out of vertically oriented wooden planking which is three inches think, with lateral stability provided by wooden dowels. It is five bays wide, with the center entrance flanked by sash windows. The entry has sidelight windows, and originally had a more elaborate Greek Revival framing. An ell, possibly once a small barn, extends to the west of the main bl ...
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