Rufus Arndt House | |
Location | 4524 N. Cramer St., Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin |
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Coordinates | 43°5′55″N 87°53′9″W / 43.09861°N 87.88583°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1925 |
Architect | Ernest Flagg; Arnold F. Meyer & Co. |
Architectural style | Cotswold Cottage |
MPS | Ernest Flagg Stone Masonry Houses of Milwaukee County TR |
NRHP reference No. | 85002016[1] |
Added to NRHP | September 12, 1985 |
The Rufus Arndt House in Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, United States, was built in 1925. It was designed by Ernest Flagg in a style that suggests Tudor Revival and Cotswold Cottage and built by the Arnold F. Meyer & Co.[2] One of the Ernest Flagg Stone Masonry Houses of Milwaukee County, this residence was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 12, 1985.[3]
Ernest Flagg was a New York architect known primarily for his grand designs of New York's 47-story Singer Tower, which was the tallest office building in the world when built in 1908, for buildings at the U.S. Naval Academy, and for the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. But Flagg was also interested in producing tasteful, inexpensive homes that the middle class could afford. Toward this end, he designed a system of standardized parts and innovative techniques which could be used to build various house configurations. Common elements include walls of natural stone and concrete poured in wooden forms which could be built even by unskilled workers, no basements, concrete floors, steeply sloped roofs to provide storage space, ridge dormers to provide summer ventilation and light, round-capped chimneys, lack of interior halls to save space, thin interior walls of plastered screen to save space, and standardized fixtures.[2]
The Arndt house is one of five of these "Flagg system" homes in its neighbourhood.[4][5]
References
- ↑ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- 1 2 Virginia A. Palmer. "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Ernest Flagg Stone Masonry Houses of Milwaukee County". National Park Service. Retrieved 2018-09-18. This document should display in Acrobat or the Edge browser, if you have trouble with other viewers.
- ↑ "Rufus E. & Lois Arndt House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
- ↑ 'Preserving our Past' Whitefish Bay Now, 10 Jan 2007, retrieved 26 Feb 2007
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Rufus Arndt home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-17. With one photo.
External links
Media related to Rufus Arndt House at Wikimedia Commons