- Dryden Historic District (North Park, San Diego, California)
-
The North Park Dryden Historic District is a historic district[1] in North Park, San Diego, 92104, along both 28th and Pershing Streets (bordered to the south by Upas Street and to the north by Landis Street) that features a high concentration of homes designed and built by the renowned Arts and Crafts era architect/builder David Owen Dryden. This proposed historic district is a neighborhood of early twentieth century American Craftsman Bungalows as well as Spanish Colonial Revival homes and California Bungalows built in the 1920s and 1930s.
North Park Dryden Historic District Approved by Historical Resources Board on June 23, 2011 An application for designation of 28th Street and Pershing Avenue from Upas to Landis Streets as a historic district was filed with the City of San Diego Historical Resources Board in May 2007. In September 2008, City staff requested additional information. The Working Group submitted a Supplemental Application in January 2009. The Supplemental Application discusses why the neighborhood reflects significant elements of North Park's development, justifies the proposed district boundaries and nominates Edward F. Bryans, who built more than a dozen homes in the proposed district, as a Master Builder. [2]
On June 23, 2011, the City's Historical Resources Board (HRB) approved, by a vote of 8-0, establishment of the North Park Dryden Historic District and also approved Edward F. Bryans as a Master Builder. Of the 136 homes in the District, 104 were approved by the HRB as contributing resources to the District. [3]
References
- ^ http://www.northparkhistory.org
- ^ http://www.northparkhistory.org/projects/#Dryden
- ^ http://www.northparkhistory.org/projects/#Dryden
Coordinates: 32°44′37″N 117°8′3″W / 32.74361°N 117.13417°W
Categories:- Bungalow architecture in California
- Landmarks in San Diego, California
- Neighborhoods in San Diego, California
- History of San Diego County, California
- Historic districts in California
- American Craftsman architecture in California
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.