Showing posts with label 1911. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1911. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2022

521 Holmes St., Wilkinsburg

Frederick G. Scheibler's 521 Holmes Street is for sale, with a listing here. As I write this, the asking price is $38,500. It's described as:

Perfect investment property located in the heart of convenience with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath and over 1700 square feet of living space. This home is minutes away from the parkway, East End, and the Wilkinsburg Shopping District that includes shopping, food, bus stops and more. This home has been owned by the same owner for 25 years and has been updated in the past few years with newer windows, roof, repaired sidewalk, stairs and landing. Home is being sold in 100% AS-IS condition with all remaining contents.

Frederick Scheibler designed 521-523 Holmes Steet in Wilkinsburg, as well as the similar 525-527 Holmes, for Robert P. McDowell. Around 1913, Scheibler also designed 3 since-demolished row houses for McDowell at 404-408 Ross Avenue in Wilksinsburg. 

(Martin Aurand writes that two of those demolished houses "shared a single semi-circular bay window, so that each had a quarter-round wedge-like extension of its living room. How I would have liked to have seen that!)

According to Martin Aurand's book, 521-523 Holmes are the same design as the row houses at 6363-6371 Aurelia Street, 7902-7924 Hamilton Avenue, 425-435 Biddle Avenue and 204-206 West Street. You can see the similarities. 

Aurand has a great chapter on "Group Cottages," Scheibler's term for his row houses. He writes, "One manifestation of the progressive movement was a reformist effort led by architects and planners to improve living conditions for the working and middle classes. This effort took place most prominently in England as the Garden City movement ... "

I love this part:

"Unlike his English colleagues, Scheibler left no clear evidence of social activism, but he must have shared some of their concerns. His group cottage developed a willingness to address the need for multifamily housing and to seek worthy solutions. .... Many of the group cottages proved to be successful speculative ventures for their clients, while they also supplied decent affordable housing at a time when many Pittsburgh-area residents were notoriously ill-housed." 

Aurand goes on with more wonderful details, but I'll stop there. A full century after Scheibler designed such "decent affordable housing" for Pittsburghers, I was able to benefit from his work. As a young professional working at a non-profit, I couldn't afford to buy a home or rent anything outside my modest budget. But I was enchanted by the Old Heidelberg, and was thrilled to be able to rent the spacious, high-ceilinged space with art glass, mosiacs, built-in cabinets, a balcony, whimsical mushrooms and so much more. I was grateful that it was accessible to me.

Here are more photos of 521 Holmes.























 


Monday, September 1, 2014

Ament House, 1204 Hulton Road, Oakmont

Hi! Sorry ... it's been awhile!

I'm really excited that since my last update, several people have reached out to me with questions, comments, and additional information for my blog. I'm so happy that fans of Frederick Scheibler have been finding their way here. This always felt like such a solitary hobby, until people like you spoke up. Thank you so much for the comments and messages. Please continue to chime in to let me know you're out there!

It's been a while since I've worked on this blog. I'm sad to say that I got discouraged when I had some run-ins with residents who weren't pleased about my visits or comments. I also had a career change, got engaged, and today, I bought a house! Some of those updates are on my other blog, MissAdventures in Pittsburgh. 

But, tonight I was inspired to go digging online. And … jackpot! I found some gorgeous photos of 1204 Hulton Road in Oakmont. I am absolutely in love, and you will be too. (I got a familiar thrill as soon as I saw exposed i-beams! Look for them below, in the kitchen!)




According to Martin Aurand's The Progressive Architecture of Frederick G. Scheibler, Scheibler designed this masterpiece for Silas M. Ament, proprietor of a Wilkinsburg insurance business, in 1907. Aurand writes about the prominent roof and gallery than runs "through the house to connect the front entry and a three-bay rear porch on the garden facade. 

My favorite shot! Wow!
He also writes that later owners, Charles and Marie Blue, added another wing and a garage. The added-on wing houses a single oval-shaped bedroom, which you can see here. Aurand writes that the exterior additions follow Scheibler's original detailing to the letter. But as for the bedroom, he says, "The story is that the Blues had this wing built by an Italian craftsman after a trip to Europe. The bedroom's rather florid classical decor is assuredly not in Scheibler's palette."  


I think the extensive gardens make this house really exciting! It's set on a 3/4 acre lot near Oakmont County Club. It has five bedrooms and three bathrooms. 

Check out the absolutely stunning interior and exterior grounds. I'm tagging this entry by the dates Aurand provides for initial design (1907) and additions (1911 and 1940). 

And P.S. I'd like to offer a heartfelt thank you to Martin Aurand, if you've ever seen this blog, for so generously allowing me to quote from your book in nearly every entry. I hope this has not bothered you.

Enjoy … !








I would love to know where these wonderful statues came from!









C'mon inside ….


So much great light! This amazing arches!







P.S. Porter says Hi.