HomeMy WebLinkAbout2771 Crawford Nomination_92716_Submitte
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CITY OF EVANSTON PRESERVATION COMMISSION
2100 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, IL 60201
(847) 866-2928; Fax: (847) 448-8120
2-8-5 APPLICATION FOR NOMINATION OF AN AREA, PROPERTY, STRUCTURE, SITE OR OBJECT FOR
DESIGNATION BY ORDINANCE AS A LANDMARK OR HISTORIC DISTRICT
(Please Print or Type and check applicable boxes. Attach additional 8-1/2 x 11" sheets as necessary)
Historic District Nomination (for a historic district nomination submit a list for each property, structure, site or object within the proposed historic district with the information below): Landmark Nomination (for individual nomination of a property, structure, site or object submit the information below:
1. a) Street address of area, property, structure, site or object being nominated:
Street # : ______________ Street Name: __________________________________________
City: ___________________ State: ___________ Zip Code: __________________________
b) Real Estate Index Number: __________________________________ Zoning: ____________
c) Original Architect/Contractor (if known): ____________________________________________
Year Built (if known): ___________ Architectural Style: ______________________________
d) Contributing significance (for historic district nomination only):
Architectural Historical Archaeological Cultural
e) Is it within an existing historic district? (Landmark nomination only) Yes No
If yes: Lakeshore Ridge Northeast Evanston:
NOTE: If the nomination is for an area, property, structure, site or object with no official street address, please indicate its location
on the attached city map (for a district show the proposed boundaries).
2. a) Provide Legal Description of Nominated Property (for Individual landmark nomination only) or;
b) Describe proposed boundaries (for historic district nomination only):
3. Owner of record shall be established by reference to the most current property tax assessment
rolls as maintained by the Assessor of Cook County.
Historic District Nomination (for a historic district nomination submit a list for each property,
structure, site or object within the proposed historic district with the information below):
Landmark Nomination: for individual nomination of a property, structure, site or object, submit
the information below):
a) Name of owner(s) of record of area, property, structure, site or object being nominated:
Phone #: ___________________ Fax #: ____________________ E-mail: __________________
b) (Mailing address) Street #: ___________ Street Name: _______________________________
City: ___________________________ State: _____________ Zip: _____________________
2771
x
Crawford Avenue
Evanston Illinois 60201
Illinois R2
John S. Van Bergen, Architect
1928 Prairie School
x
x
LOT 2 IN THE ESTATE OF CAROLINE GERSTENBRAND SUBDIVISION IN THE WEST
HALF OF SECTION 33, TOWNSHIP 42 NORTH, RANGE 13, EAST OF THE THIRD
PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, IN COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS.
Christopher Enck and Martha Skup
630-334-0952 cjenck@gmail.com
455 Birch Street
Winnetka Illinois 60093
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4. Please submit complete information as required in the Evanston Historic Preservation Ordinance,
Section 2-8-4: Criteria for Designation. Provide factual information as applicable for each single item
listed in Section 2-8-4. You may include documents and photographs to emphasize the significance of
the nominated area, property, structure, site or object for designation by ordinance as a landmark or historic district. Use 8-1/2" x 11" attachment sheets if needed.
2-8-4: CRITERIA FOR DESIGNATION: Every nominated Landmark or District must meet two or
more of the following specified criteria for designation.
(A) The Commission shall limit their consideration to the following criteria in making a
determination on a nomination of an area, property, structure, site or object for designation
by ordinance as a Landmark or Historic District.
1. Its location as a site of a significant historic or prehistoric event or activity which may or may
not have taken place within or involved the use of any existing improvements on the
property;
2. Its identification with a person or persons who significantly contributed to the historic,
cultural, architectural, archaeological or related aspect of the development of the City of
Evanston, State of Illinois, Midwest region, or the United States;
3. Its exemplification of an architectural type, style or design distinguished by innovation, rarity,
uniqueness, or overall quality of design, detail, materials, or craftsmanship;
4. Its identification as the work of an architect, designer, engineer, or builder whose individual
work is significant in the history or development of the City of Evanston, the State of Illinois,
the Midwest region, or the United States;
5. Its exemplification of important planning and urban design techniques distinguished by
innovation, rarity, uniqueness or overall quality of design or detail;
6. Its association with important cultural or social aspects or events in the history of the City of
Evanston, the State of Illinois, the Midwest region, or the United States;
7. Its location as a site of an important archaeological resource;
8. Its representation of a historic, cultural, architectural, archaeological or related theme
expressed through distinctive areas, properties, structures, sites or objects that may or may
not be contiguous;
9. Its unique location or distinctive physical appearance or presence representing an
established and familiar visual feature of a neighborhood, community, or the City of
Evanston;
10. Its exemplification of a pattern of neighborhood development or settlement significant to the
cultural history or traditions of the City of Evanston, whose components may lack individual
distinction.
(B) Integrity of Landmarks and Districts.
Any area, property, structure, site or object that meets any one or more of the criteria in
Section 2-8-4(A) shall also have sufficient integrity of location, design, materials and
workmanship to make it worthy of preservation or restoration.
5. a) Name of Applicant(s): ___________________________________________________________
b) Phone: ________________ Fax: __________________ E-mail: __________________________
c) Mailing Address of applicant (s) Street #: _________ Street Name: _______________________
City: ____________________ State: ______ Zip: ________ ,
c) Applicant(s)’ Signature: ______________________________Date: _______________________
Submit the nomination form to: Evanston Preservation Commission, 2100 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, IL 60201
For additional information contact: Carlos D. Ruiz (847) 448-8687, Fax: (847) 448-8120, E-mail:
cruiz@cityofevanston.org
Christopher Enck
630-334-0952 cjenck@gmail.com
455 Birch Street
Winnetka Illinois
9/20/16
Evanston Landmark Nomination Form
Name of Property (original name): James B. Irving House
Street Address: 2771 Crawford Avenue, Evanston, Illinois
Legal description or PIN: 05-33-303-040-0000
Present use: Single family residential
Past Use: Single family residential
Architect: John S. Van Bergen
Date of Construction: 1928
Written statement describing property & setting forth reasons it is eligible for landmark
designation:
The Irving House is a multi-level wood-frame house with stucco cladding and
painted wood trim designed by John Van Bergen in 1928 for James Irving. It is located at
2771 Crawford Avenue at the northwest corner of Evanston. The house was originally
located at 1318 Isabella Street in Wilmette, Illinois. The house was threatened with
demolition and was relocated in October 2014 to a temporary site and then to the current
location in March 2015. Overall, the property is in excellent condition due to recent
restoration work.
The residence is built in the Prairie School movement and reflects Van Bergen’s
early influence from his time spent in the Oak Park office of Frank Lloyd Wright. The house
is sited with its primary façade facing the street and a relatively large expanse of lawn and
landscaping to the street to the south. In massing, the house is a split-level configuration
with the primary spaces on the ground floor and the bedrooms up half a flight of stairs and
basement down half a flight of stairs. A one and a half story living room faces the street
with one story flanking wings projecting to the east and west. The mass of the house is
topped by a long, low hipped roof with deep overhanging eaves, creating the strong
horizontal emphasis characteristic of the Prairie School. Gutters are built in to the eaves
with minimal penetrations through the soffits. This horizontality is further emphasized by
grouped casement windows, a broad water table trim board and bands of decorative
horizontal trim.
On the interior of the house, much of the original architectural fabric remains.
Simple bands of stained pine trim further the Prairie School design, while original geometric
light fixtures exist in the living room, dining room and loft, which overlooks the living room.
Oak floors and a broad simply detailed brick fireplace are other features that date from the
construction of the house. Wood casement windows in a variety of sizes and groupings
are all original with the exception of the later aluminum casement windows in the sunroom,
which were added later to enclose what was originally an open porch. This space was
screened early on and was later enclosed with glass and finally the existing windows were
installed in the 1990s.
The Irving House is eligible for landmark designation because it is an excellent
example of a Prairie School house with quality of design and intact original materials and
a mostly unaltered appearance. With a design by John Van Bergen, one of the prominent
Prairie School architects, the house serves an important part of the architectural legacy of
the Chicago region and Van Bergen’s body of work and design progression.
This structure is eligible for designation on the basis of the following criteria:
(3) Its exemplification of an architectural type, style or design distinguished by innovation,
rarity, uniqueness, or overall quality of design, detail, materials, or craftsmanship.
(4) Its identification as the work of an architect, designer, engineer, or builder whose
individual work is significant in the history or development of the City of Evanston, the
State of Illinois, the Midwest region, or the United States.
Criteria 3: Its exemplification of an architectural type, style or design distinguished
by innovation, rarity, uniqueness, or overall quality of design, detail, materials, or
craftsmanship.
The Prairie School was a late 19th and early 20th century movement of architecture
and design that developed in the Midwestern region of the United States. The Prairie
School developed simultaneously with the Arts and Crafts Movement in England with both
movements forming as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution and sought to promote the
work of artists and handcrafting objects and buildings.
Frank Lloyd Wright, John Van Bergen and their contemporaries also sought to
create a truly American style of architecture in contrast to the traditional European-revival
styles that were more prevalent in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The later coined term
“Prairie School” was created to define the work of several architects whose careers largely
developed in the middle part of the United States and whose architecture, with a strong
emphasis on horizontality, reflected the traditionally vast open and flat prairie landscapes
of Illinois and surrounding areas. Wright and others also promoted the idea of organic
architecture, which sought to create buildings whose lines and ornament appear in
harmony with the landscape on which they are placed. This approach to design is a striking
contrast to traditional European revival architecture that referenced classical elements and
forms regardless of the site or context.
The Irving House is representative of the Prairie School and is in the direct lineage
of the work of Frank Lloyd Wright and his late 19th and early 20th century designs. With its
wide stance and low projecting hipped roofs and wide projecting eaves, the house spreads
as broadly as possible on its small urban lot. In section, the house is a split-level
configuration with the entry, living room, dining room, sunroom and kitchen exist at grade
and the bedrooms are accessed up half a flight of stairs and basement down half a flight
of stairs. This configuration serves to keep the body of the house low on the site in contrast
to a typical two story house with an attic, effectively achieving the appearance of other
Prairie School structures that have the benefit of sprawling across much larger sites.
Exterior cladding of stucco with bands of painted wood trim are further
representative of the Prairie School. Bands of casement windows with horizontal panes of
glass exist at a majority of the corners of the house rather than the individual punched
windows common in many revival style homes. Decorative planters extend from the wall
of the building at several locations around the exterior and further the relationship between
the landscape and the built house. The front and back entrances are somewhat obscured
by these planters, forcing the visitor to discover the entrance to the house as with many of
Wright’s designs.
The Irving House is similar in plan and massing to the Isabel Roberts House in
River Forest, Illinois, which was built in 1908 and published in the Wasmuth Portfolio in
1910. Van Bergen worked in Wright’s Oak Park office in 1909 and was the last remaining
architect with Isabel Roberts (Wright’s office manager) when Wright left for Europe. While
Van Bergen’s early work has many similarities to that of Wright, interestingly this is quite
directly referential to a specific Wright design.
Evanston is home to several other houses and commercial buildings by other
Prairie School architects from the late 19th and early 20th century and the relocated Irving
House fits into this architectural context with its use of materials, massing, relationship to
the landscape and historical context.
Criteria 4: Its identification as the work of an architect, designer, engineer, or builder
whose individual work is significant in the history or development of the City of
Evanston, the State of Illinois, the Midwest region, or the United States.
John Van Bergen (1885-1969) was raised in Oak Park, Illinois, the area that would
come to be associated with Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie School. Van Bergen had
little formal education in architecture. He was a student of architecture at the Chicago
Technical College for only three months. He received his architectural training as an
apprentice in the office of Walter Burley Griffin for two years. In 1909, Van Bergen was the
last person hired to work in Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park studio. While Van Bergen only
worked in Wright’s office for one year before the office was shut down, he worked on many
of Wright’s high-profile commissions. He also oversaw the completion of several designs
once Wright had left the office for Europe. After leaving Wright’s office, Van Bergen started
his own design office and continued practicing in the Prairie School through the 1930s,
longer than most of his contemporaries. Most of Van Bergen’s houses are located in the
Chicago suburbs.
In 1910, Van Bergen submitted a design to a competition held by the Building Brick
Association of America. The contest involved designing a house to cost $4,000 and be
economical, functional, and beautiful. Van Bergen’s design stood out from the hundreds
of mostly historical revival style designs as it was one of only two Prairie School designs.
Van Bergen worked in the office of another former Wright employee, William
Drummond from 1910 to 1911. After earning his architectural license in 1911, Van Bergen
left the office of Drummond and opened his own office in Oak Park. The years of Van
Bergen’s Oak Park office were some of his most prolific, with 32 projects between 1911
and 1920. Fifteen of Van Bergen’s architectural designs were included in the The Twenty-
Eighth Annual Chicago Architectural Exhibition at the Art Institute in 1915.
During World War I, Van Bergen left his practice to volunteer for the war effort.
interrupted his career to volunteer for service during World War I. Following the war, Van
Bergen continued many of the ideas of the Prairie School where many of his
contemporaries had moved to other design ideas. In 1921, Van Bergen moved his practice
from Oak Park to Ravinia, which is today part of Highland Park. Van Bergen completed a
number of designs for houses, schools and other projects during these successful inter-
war years. Designs included a mix of those true to the Prairie School and others with a
Modernist approach.
When the Irving House was designed in 1928, this was one of his designs true to
the ideas and design approach of Frank Lloyd Wright and the pre-World War I years. Van
Bergen referenced Wright’s design for the Isabel Roberts House from twenty years before.
This period of Van Bergen’s career was interrupted when he volunteered during World War
II. Following the war, Van Bergen had all but left his traditional Prairie School approach in
favor of a type of organic modernism favored by Wright and others in the post-war period.
Van Bergen continued in his Ravinia office until 1951 when he moved to the Chicago
suburb of Barrington where he built a home and studio. His practice existed here until 1955
when he moved to California. His home and studio in Santa Barbara was the location of
his practice until 1964 when a wild fire destroyed the buildings along with all of Van
Bergen’s records and designs.
The Historic American Building Survey recognized the importance of Van Bergen’s
designs as early as 1967. Van Bergen practiced as an architect until 1968. He died in
1969. Despite his large body of extant work and quality of design and construction of his
many projects, he is less studied than many of his Prairie School contemporaries. The
destruction of his archive of drawings and documents made it difficult to study his work and
much of what has been researched has involved documenting his built projects. Van
Bergen’s work was presented in an exhibition at the Chicago Architecture Foundation
researched and organized by Martin Hackl. Van Bergen’s work was celebrated in October
2012 with “John Van Bergen Month” – a series of events, tours, lectures and public
educational programming about the architect’s contribution to design and construction in
the Chicago area and nationwide.
Additional information
Below is the list of known Van Bergen designed properties in Evanston.
Built Original Owner Name Address
1914 George Ballard Residence 1026 Michigan Avenue
1914
1916
Harold White Residence #1
Louis Sherland Garage
741 N. Sheridan Road
1019 Davis (Substantially Altered)
Attachments
A. Site Plan
B. Current House Plans
C. Original Drawings
D. Representative Photos
ATTACHMENT A
ATTACHMENT B
ATTACHMENT C
Photo 1: Current view of south façade.
Photo 2: Main façade at original Wilmette site.
ATTACHMENT D
Note: All images from the author unless noted otherwise.
Photo 3: Route of move to current site.
Photo 4: Locations of cut lines for move.
Map from Google.
Photo 5: Process of cutting house.
Photo 6: Close up view of cut through house.
Photo 7: Chimney prior to removal.
Photo 8: Process of raising rear section of house.
Photo 9: Process of raising rear section of house.
Photo 10: Process of raising rear section of house.
Photo 11: Moving of house sections on original Wilmette site.
Photo 12: Moving of house sections on original Wilmette site.
Photo 13: Moving of house sections on original Wilmette site.
Photo 14: Moving of house sections on original Wilmette site.
Photo 15: Moving of house sections on original Wilmette site.
Photo 16: Temporary location between moves at Whole Foods, Green Bay Road, Evanston.
Photo from The Evanstonian.
Photo 17: March 2015 moving of house sections.
Photo 18: March 2015 positioning of sections on new site.
Photo 19: Raising of sections on new site.
Photo 20: Pouring of new foundations below house sections.
Photo 21: Interior repairs.
Photo 22: New roofing and restored built-in gutters.
Photo 23: South façade at new site.
Photo 24: South façade, west end.
Photo 25: West façade.
Photo 26: North façade.
Photo 27: North and east facades.
Photo 28: East façade.
Photo 29: Main entrance.
Photo 30: Interior of main entrance.
Photo 31: Entry view toward dining room.
Photo 32: Entry view toward living room.
Photo 33: Living room looking south.
Photo 34: Living room view toward fireplace and loft.
Photo 35: Living room vestibule toward sunroom.
Photo 36: Sunroom looking east.
Photo 37: Sunroom view toward living room.
Photo 38: Living room fireplace toward dining room.
Photo 39: Dining room looking southwest.
Photo 40: Kitchen.
Photo 41: Kitchen.
Photo 42: Stairs looking toward loft.
Photo 43: Loft.
Photo 44: Loft.
Photo 45: Living room viewed from loft.
Photo 46: Upper level hallway viewed from loft.
Photo 47: Upper level hallway view of repaired section cut line.
Photo 48: Master bedroom.
Photo 49: Master bathroom.
Photo 50: Northwest bedroom.
Photo 51: Northeast bedroom.
Photo 52: Hall bathroom.
Photo 53: Unfinished basement.
Photo 54: Exterior view of soffits.