8/2002)
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This nomination consists of an inner city residential subdivision filled with houses from the late nineteenth century and turn of the century periods. These houses are largely single-family dwellings and are principally of wood frame construction. They are interspersed with the occasional apartment building, neighborhood commercial building and are all clustered west and north of the Jones Home for Children. This facility is centered about a massive Colonial Revival style brick building capped by a spire-like cupola. All of these properties are set along tree-lined streets in a neighborhood three miles southwest of downtown Cleveland. The Jones Home Subdivisions Historic District is located on the west side of the City of Cleveland and is set west of West 25th Street and north of Interstate Highway 71. West 25th Street, just east of the proposed district, is a busy commercial route that follows a prehistoric trail and so is set slightly off the axis of the north-south grid of the streets within the district. The land in the district is fairly level, but slopes gradually to the north. The land also slopes very gradually to the east. No streams or other natural features interrupt the district. This is a rectangular tract of land that conforms to the boundaries of the former David F. and Cynthia Jones Farm, later owned by Carlos Lloyd and Adelia Brainard Jones and subdivided by Carlos Jones and Julius S. Edwards. This portion of Cleveland is laid out on a gridiron plan, with residential side streets generally running due east and west. West 25th is the only exception, forming slightly odd angle intersections with the side streets. In the center of the district are long east-west blocks. West from West 25th, the next street to intersect Woodbridge, Marvin, Daisy and Library is West 32nd. To the west, the next north-south street is West 35th. These four avenues are fairly broad streets lined with regularly spaced residences, with an occasional commercial building, church or apartment building. North of the proposed district, the street plan changes, with the lot sizes altering and alleys behind the lots being omitted. The grid also shifts north of here to a series of more closely spaced north-south streets and more widely spaced eastwest avenues. To the west, the street plan shifts. Although Woodbridge and Marvin extend through continuously to Fulton Road, Daisy jogs to the north and Library ends at the alley known as West 39th Street and Bush Avenue begins just north of here. The street widths, lot sizes and the presence of alleys create a subdivision that is uniform in its layout and generally reflective of the more middle class nature of its residents. Within the district, the lots are almost all forty feet wide by 145 feet in depth. The streets are sixty feet wide and the alleys are fourteen feet in width. The lots all originally faced onto the east-west avenues, but some were altered such that small lots now face onto the numbered north-south streets in a few instances. Most of the surrounding streets, such as Poe and Smith and the numbered streets outside of the district are 50 feet wide. In general, the first houses erected in the subdivisions formed from the former Jones farm are further east, toward West 25th Street. West 25th was the major route into Cleveland, as it remains today, and therefore development took place nearer to here than to Fulton Road, which extends northward toward Ohio City. The major exception to the gridiron plan of the district is the presence of a large tract of land at its eastern end. This land contains the Jones Home for Children, originally the Jones Home and School for Friendless Children. This property contains the nucleus of the former Jones farmstead and has at its
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center the main building of Jones Home. The Jones Home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (8-30-96) and is a designated Cleveland landmark. The Jones Home is one of the city's more monumental institutional buildings and is a major visual presence in this area, standing at the center of the eastern end of the former Jones farm. It borders on a residential area to the south and north of the grounds. Large frame single-family houses border the Jones Home property, with I-71 right-of-way taking up much of the south side of the grounds. The district's southeast corner experienced a major change when I-71 was erected through here in the 1960s. Library Avenue was terminated and properties along its south side opposite Jones Home were demolished to make way for the freeway's ramps up to West 25th Street. The original iron fence surrounding the Jones Home was replaced with a chain link fence. The district contains 506 primary buildings and an additional 246 garages and other outbuildings. Of this number, 17 primary buildings and 33 garages are non-contributing. Most of these are newer buildings. Only 3 primary buildings have been altered in their construction such that they are no longer contributing. Many are properties that face onto West 25th Street. One is the dormitory with boys' and girls' wings erected behind Jones Home in 1960. One is the 1988 gym for Jones Home. Another is a gas station at the corner of Marvin and another is a car dealership at the corner of Woodbridge. There are also some vacant lots along West 25th Street. Otherwise, the streets in the district have a very high degree of integrity. The vast majority of resources in the district contribute to its architectural character. Many of these survive in an excellent state of preservation. Some have recently been restored. Others have modern siding treatments such as aluminum, vinyl, asbestos shingle or Insulbrick, but their basic character remains intact. A few have undergone more drastic modifications, such as the loss of a front porch or the construction of an addition. While the character of these buildings have undeniably been altered, there is enough original fabric in each instance to identify each altered building as an example of a particular style or period and therefore these have also been classified as contributing resources. Thus, nearly all of the properties along Marvin, Daisy, Library and Woodbridge are categorized as contributing buildings. Garages have been categorized as contributing buildings as they usually date from the same early 20th century period as the houses in front. (photos 47-52) Some garages are old carriage barns, with a few being quite large and two stories in height. Most are quite plain and simple frame buildings. Ten garages postdate the period of significance but are of the same form and type of construction as the older garages. Because of their age they are not considered to be contributing buildings, but were not counted as non-contributing as they were not substantial in size or scale. Non-Contributing Properties The two major intrusions in the district are a gas station and a used car dealership. These occupy corners at West 25th and are modern post-World War II era buildings. The third non-contributing property is the dormitory behind Jones Home, consisting of two interconnected cottages known as Astrup and Case, which was erected in 1960. It relates to the main building by their use of similar brick, but are of a contemporary style.
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Styles and House Types Found in the District The architectural styles of the Jones Home Subdivisions Historic District represent the range of styles popular in the late nineteenth through early twentieth centuries in Greater Cleveland. The earliest represented style is Vernacular/Greek Revival. There are a handful of Italianate style residences, only a few of which are in the bracketed mode. The Queen Anne style is much more prominent in the district, with several prominent examples that have octagonal corner towers. The predominant style in the district is Colonial Revival, a common form of which is the hipped roof Foursquare type. Tudor Revival is a less common style, but still represented by several examples. Arts and Crafts architecture is more rare, but there are a few examples of the style. There are a handful of Bungalow residences, the neighborhood being largely complete before this style gained popularity. The Stick Style is represented by a few examples. A number of houses have Eastlake-inspired detailing, but none is a true example of this relatively uncommon style. There are a few examples that recall in part the Shingle Style in the district. No houses are in the Late Gothic Revival or Richardsonian Romanesque styles, but the district contains a prominent church in the Late Gothic Revival style. Major building types include the following: A. Cross-shaped house, two stories, two bays in front This house type dates from the late nineteenth century and is usually Queen Anne in style, although some examples have Italianate and/or Eastlake detailing. It has a cross-shaped plan, formed by the intersection of two gable-roofed wings, usually about sixteen feet in width. The side gables are shorter than the front gables and sometimes one of these side gables has a semi-octagonal end. Rarely does the front gable have such an apse-like termination. The rear section is unusually lower in height, yet still two stories. Sometimes there is a further one-story kitchen wing. The front porch may be along the side or wrap around the front of the house as well. Examples: 3101 Marvin Ave. (photo 22), 2603 Marvin (photo 21) 3441 Marvin (photo 24) B. Modified American Foursquare A full-width front porch, massive hipped roof above the second floor, front-facing semi-octagonal bays and projecting dining room bay windows are all features of this form of Colonial Revival residence, which is larger and grander than the typical American Foursquare house. Each still seems to have four rooms in each of the corners of the house and generally has two front-facing bays Examples: 3005-13 Daisy (photo 5)3537 Woodbridge (photo 30) C. Front-Gabled Two Story Houses This is the most common house type in the district and rows of these line the western stretches of the avenues. These all have two full floors beneath a massive front-facing gable roof. The gable is given a special treatment in front, such as a Palladian attic window, elaborate shingle patterns, or some other unusual attic window treatment. The houses often have cantilevered stair wings at one side that rise up to the attic level and have grade-level doors below. They also have full-width front porches. Examples: 3219 etc. Daisy (photo 7), 3518 etc. Daisy (photo 11)3612 etc. Marvin (photo 27)
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D Four-Suite Flat-Type Apartments This building type is interspersed throughout the district, but is somewhat rare. These are two-story flatroofed brick buildings that have two suites on each floor which are side-by-side and stacked above each other. The buildings often have large two-story front porches. Examples: 3429 Marvin (photo 24), 3418-20 Daisy E. Terrace Apartments In this neighborhood of largely single-family houses, this type of unit is also somewhat rare, but there are two examples. These are generally brick buildings, with more elaborate front elevations and plainer sides and rears. They consist of townhouse apartments with common side walls. Each unit usually has a separate front porch and exterior entrance. Examples: Nubemyer Terrace (photo 19), Woodbridge Terrace (photo 35) F. Carriage Barns These carriage barns date from the era of the horse and buggy and generally take the form of a two-story building with a lateral gable roof and then often having a central gable facing the front, with a door for lifting hay up to the loft. A single center doorway below was usually present. These carriage barns are quite different from rural barns, as they are smaller and more specialized in their function. Examples: 3113 Marvin (photo 8), 3011 Marvin, 2822 Woodbridge, 3628 Daisy G. Rear Houses Initially, the neighborhood was built up with one house per lot, often with garages behind them served by the small alleys that run behind each of the avenues. In some instances, small cottage-like houses or even fairly large houses were erected behind the front houses. In a few cases, it appears as though an original carriage barn may have been modified into a dwelling. In others, a ca. 1920 Bungalow has been placed behind the main house. These are usually smaller and plainer than the front houses. Examples: 2604 Marvin, 3300 Library, 3610 Daisy, 3735 Woodbridge (photo 45) Street-by Street Building Descriptions Beginning at the eastern end of the district, The Jones Home visually dominates the streetscape at the corner of West 25th and Interstate 71. (photo 1) The main building stands back from the street on spacious and landscaped grounds accented by shade trees and shrubbery. This is a two and a half story building executed in the Colonial Revival style that measures approximately one hundred feet in length and which has a maximum depth of about fifty feet. The building rises from a base of rock-faced sandstone and has a tall raised basement level separated from the main floors by a broad water table. The two principal floors are faced with yellow brick accented by sandstone trim. Stone quoins accent the corners and the edges of the projecting central pavilion. This section contains the main entrance, shielded by a spacious colonnaded one-story porch. The center section rises up to an attic pediment with modillioned cornice and featuring a modified Palladian window in its center. Above this pediment, at the center of the roof, rises a tall cupola, octagonal in form, with an open belfry and a domed roof. Flanking the pediment in the center of the attic are dormer windows. Broad evenly spaced multi-paned rectangular double-hung windows accent the building's exterior. Flat arches and keystones accent these windows.
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M. J. Pollock Meats, 3460 West 25th Street, is a typical early 20th century neighborhood commercial building and stands at the northeast corner of Marvin Avenue. It has a series of second floor apartments located over a commercial storefront with display windows and central recessed entry. The apartments have a central balcony that extends out over the street and pairs of windows that accent the wire-cut brick facade. The rear is plainly finished and features a covered full-width porch that provides rear entrance to the apartments. The residence at 3000 Library abuts the rear lot line of Jones Home. (photo 18) This is a Queen Anne style frame residence that survives in a very good state of preservation. Its main lateral gable roof is interrupted by a sharply pitched front-facing attic gable that extends out over the second floor semioctagonal bay window. A small hipped dormer also faces the street. A cantilevered east side stair wing is present. Nubemyer Terrace, 3200-06 Library Ave., is one of the most elaborate terrace apartments in this part of the city. (photo 19) It dates from about 1909 and is finished in pressed red brick. Its facade is enlivened by a series of undulations formed by two-story projecting bay windows along the sides. The parapet walls along the two principal elevations step upward in Flemish fashion and are capped with cut sandstone. A series of small hip roofed porches accents the exterior. A stone tablet accents the front elevation and bears the building's name. The plainly finished rear elevation is concealed by the Lshaped plan. 3307 Library Avenue is a rather typical Colonial Revival residence and dates from 1905. Its frontfacing gable roof is accented by shingle siding and a pair of attic windows. 3400 Library Avenue is a more typical turn of the century Colonial Revival style house that dates from 1906. It is distinguished by its full-width front porch with open pergola-type brackets facing the street and the sides. The residence at 3428 Library Avenue is the district's most distinguished Bungalow. This large 1909 house stands on a spacious and well-landscaped lot. It has a semi-octagonal west side bay window and decorative exposed rafter tails at the eaves of its massive hipped roof. The interiors have fine woodwork and vaulted ceilings. One of the district's best restored houses is at 3502 Library. (photo 15) This 1908 Queen Anne style house has a massive front porch with stone base which is supported by clusters of wood columns. (A cantilevered stair wing on the east side.) Small windows accent attic gables on the various sides. A front-facing second floor semi-octagonal bay is capped by a projecting attic gable. The house is painted in historic colors. The residence at 3717 Library has a massive front-facing attic gable with a Palladian window at its center. Eaves and the front gable are bracketed. The house survives in a fine state of preservation. The residence at 3718 Library is more unusual in that its roof extends down into the second floor in Bungalow fashion, but an unusual side gable on one side is flanked by a two-story semioctagonal wing on the other side. A broad box-bay dormer accents the second floor in front. 2700 Daisy Avenue is an Italianate style residence that dates from about 1880. (photo 4) It has a projecting front section capped by a gable roof that has a paneled attic gable accented by novelty siding. A wrap-around front porch has a pedimented entry set at a forty-five degree angle. There are two side-
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facing gabled wings along this fairly long house. A broad first floor window may be an alteration. One of the district's two churches is located at 2806 Daisy Avenue and stands across the street from the Jones Home. Emmanuel Apostolic Church dates from 1926 and is an example of Late Gothic Revival style architecture. It has an unusual form, with a projecting flat-roofed front entrance wing that has a crenelated parapet and a plain entrance hood. The main church has a low gable roof and a flat-roofed section with irregularly spaced windows. The church may initially have been hidden by a house since it seems to have been designed to have been partially behind another building. It is a modest, unimposing brick building. A large and elaborate Queen Anne style residence stands at 3000 Daisy Avenue. This circa 1880 building has elaborate double doors set on a wrap-around front porch with spindled railings and a diagonal pedimented entry. The projecting front wing is capped by a gable that has two small windows and extends out over a two-story semi-octagonal section. A projecting side gable is similarly styled. The lateral chimney is elaborately corbeled at its top. A massive hipped roof that flares out over bracketed eaves crowns the large frame residence at 3005 Daisy Avenue. (photo 5) It is a well preserved Colonial Revival style house that dates from 1902. The residence at 3108 Daisy Avenue (photo 6) is a transitional Queen Anne-Colonial Revival style building that is wood frame and has a gable roof accented by hipped side dormers, one of which cantilevers out for the main stairway. The property is also notable for a highly visible two-story carriage barn set behind the house and visible from the side street. The barn has a slate roof. An octagonal corner tower accents the Queen Anne style house at 3211 Daisy Avenue. The house has an enclosed front porch and a two-story rear porch. The house at 3219 Daisy Avenue (photo 7) has a massive front-facing gable roof that is accented by an attic Palladian window. The building has a cantilevered east side stairway bay. An unusual gambrel roof crowns the Bungalow-like residence at 3223 Daisy Avenue. The front-facing gambrel roof has a flaring eaves and a cluster of windows in front on the second floor set into a projecting bay. It is a rare example of Dutch Colonial Revival architecture in the district. 3400 Daisy Avenue is a Colonial Revival style frame dwelling dating from 1905. It features a Palladian window in its front-facing attic gable. The front elevation has a full-width front porch and a second floor semi-octagonal bay window. The residence at 3410 Daisy Avenue is one of the older houses on the street, dating from 1891, and is Italianate in style. It has the common cross form associated with this style and is quite well preserved. The house is distinguished by its elaborate pedimented front porch. A somewhat rare example of the Bungalow style is at 3417 Daisy Avenue. This house has a steep gable roof that swoops out over the full-width recessed and enclosed front porch. A broad front-facing second floor shed dormer accents the roofline. More unusual, there is a second floor balcony-like porch facing the street. Daisy Avenue Terrace, 3422-28 Daisy Avenue, is one of the major buildings of the proposed district. (photo 10) It dates from 1907 and is an example of Colonial Revival architecture. The building is faced with running bond pressed red brick and has parapet walls that conceal its flat roof. The building occupies a prominent corner location. 3614 Daisy Avenue is a distinguished brick Colonial Revival residence that is one of the more elaborate houses in the district. Smooth-cut sandstone sills and lintels accent the exterior. The full-width front porch has an elegant iron railing.
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Pressed buff brick faces the exterior, except for the shingles in the front gable. The house has fine oak woodwork and beveled glass windows. The residence at 2615 Marvin Avenue is one of the older houses on the street, dating from about 1880. (photo 21) It is Queen Anne in style and has asbestos shingle siding that probably covers over the original clapboards. The house has a cross-shaped plan and elegant semi-octagonal bay windows on its front elevation. 3006 Marvin Avenue is another very old house, dating from 1891 and which is Queen Anne in style. The house has elegant novelty siding in its front gable and between the first and second floors. The front porch is a Colonial Revival addition. Its east side wing is semi-octagonal. 3009 Marvin Avenue is a larger Queen Anne-Colonial Revival style frame residence that features a large arched front attic window with elaborate surrounds. This window has stained glass panels. 3101 Marvin Avenue is one of the best preserved Queen Anne houses on the street, having the distinctive cross-shaped plan and featuring bargeboard trim and a pedimented front porch. (photo 22) The house has an historic paint color scheme. Its interior woodwork has been beautifully restored. Among its highlights are an elaborate stained glass window in its entry hall and a stone fireplace with faux marble design and scene painting in a crest atop the mantel. The house has recently been fully restored. 3014 Marvin is a rare and especially well preserved example of Dutch Colonial Revival style architecture. The building features intersection gambrel roofs. Its full-width front porch was apparently altered in 1912 by the addition of an enclosed front porch above on the second floor. The building has been painted in historic colors and its interiors, with their fine oak woodwork and pocket doors, restored. 3108 Marvin is an earlier Queen Anne style house that dates from the 1880 timeframe. It too has an historic paint color scheme and is distinguished by its elaborate bargeboard and wrap-around front porch. There is a two-story semi-octagonal east side bay. Suleyman's Food & Dairy is a major historic commercial landmark of the district. (photos 23, 44) The building is vernacular in form but has Italianate details such as front brackets and hoods over windows. It has a Western Falsefront facing onto Marvin Avenue that is accented by a triangular gable in its center. The storefront also has a cornice atop it and is largely intact. The building stretches back a considerable distance down West 32nd Street and seems to connect to a rear storage facility. It is a well preserved example of late nineteenth century Cleveland neighborhood commercial architecture. Across the street, 3203 Marvin Avenue is a distinctive frame Queen Anne residence that features a 1925 Neoclassical storefront addition. (photo 23) The house has had its front porch removed in the process. The front gable of the house has a semi-octagonal attic window and unusual basket-weave shingles and the east elevation has a semi-octagonal projecting dormer. The front addition is faced with wire-cut brick. An elaborate late 19th century Queen Anne style house is at 3311 Marvin Avenue. It has a very elaborate front porch that is set at the house's northeast corner in the angle formed by its two primary wings. Elaborate spindles just under the eaves accent the porch. Novelty siding appears in a panel on the front gable between the first and second floors. A two-story semi-octagonal bay is on the west side.
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3353 Marvin is an Eastlake-inspired frame dwelling that has elaborate window trim and an L-wing to the east. It has a Colonial Revival front porch addition, including a pedimented second floor porch set in the angle on the side. 3407 Marvin Avenue is a Colonial Revival style residence with a massive flaring hipped roof that extends out over a second floor front-facing semi-octagonal bay window. The fullwidth front porch is supported by wood columns set atop masonry pedestals. Bream Apartments, located at 3429 Marvin Avenue, forms a major visual element in the district, as one of a handful of four-suiter units. (photo 24) It dates from 1916 and is one of the later buildings in the district. It is of brick bearing wall construction and has a flat roof shielded by parapet walls. The building's two-story front porch is full-width, supported by massive brick piers and provides space for a porch area for each unit. Its upper sash windows are Arts and Crafts-inspired. The building has a wirecut brick facade. 3444 Marvin Avenue is an example of turn of the century Queen Anne-Colonial Revival transitional architecture. The building's massive front-facing gable roof is accented by a grouping of three windows. First floor windows are multiple paned on their upper sash. A horizontal fascia board separates the first and second floors. It is possible that the house was an earlier Queen Anne house that was altered in the Colonial Revival style as its original permit states that it was oneand-a-half stories tall and then another dwelling permit was taken out in 1903, perhaps for the present building. 3505 Marvin Avenue is a large and imposing hip-roofed Colonial Revival that is quite well preserved. (photo 26) It has broad bracketed eaves and a front-facing dormer. It also has a cantilevered east side stair wing and a full-width front porch. Woodbridge Terrace is, next to Nubemyer Terrace, the most monumental apartment building in the district. (photo 35) The building stands at 2511-17 Woodbridge Avenue, just west of West 25th Street. It has a stone tablet at its center in the parapet wall above the second floor. The building is faced with pressed running bond brick on its front elevation and common brick elsewhere. Its facade is enlivened by a series of two-story semi-octagonal projecting bay windows and two broad hip-roofed porches that provide access to two units each. This is a four-unit building that is quite well preserved. 2822 Woodbridge is an Italianate style frame dwelling that is accented by narrow clapboard siding and novelty siding in its front gable. Hood moldings are above the major window openings. The full-width front porch is quite elaborate and has a pedimented entry. It leads to a pair of double front doors. There is a semi-octagonal east side bay. 2910 Woodbridge is an elaborate Colonial Revival style house with a Bungalow-like lateral gable roof that extends down into the second floor area. Two box-bay dormers each contain a pair of windows on the second floor facing the street. The district's most monumental church building is at Woodbridge and West 32nd Street. (photo 32) The former Fourth Reformed Church dates from 1909 and is an example of Late Gothic Revival style architecture. Its tall parapet tower on the street corner is a major visual landmark. This corner tower is flanked by gabled wings facing each street that have large gothic stained glass windows. The building extends back along West 32nd and contains a two-story classroom wing. The church is faced with pressed red brick and has sandstone trim. Perhaps the district's most unusual house is at 3809 Woodbridge. (photos 28, 46) This house has a halftimbered second floor and a first floor faced with elegant Flemish bond brickwork. This is the district's
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only Tudor Revival style residence and recalls the large old residences of Cleveland Heights in its styling and fine craftsmanship. It is quite well preserved.
CONTRIBUTING AND NON-CONTRIBUTING BUILDINGS
2604 2604 2608 2608 2612 2710 2710 2806 2810 2810 2900 2900 2904 2904 3000 3000 3005 3005 3006 3009 3009 3010 3013 3013 3100 3103 3104 3104 3108 3111 3111 3201 3202 3207 3208 3208 3210 3210 3211 3214 3215 3218 3219 3219 3222 3222 3223 3223 3226 3226 3227 3227 3302 3303 3303 3306 Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Daisy Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue Avenue main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing non-contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing
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garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure rear front main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage rear main structure main structure garage main structure rear main structure front main structure main structure garage main structure main structure front rear main structure main structure contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
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garage main structure garage main structure garage front rear main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure front rear main structure garage main structure garage main structure rear front rear main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure contributing contributing non-contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
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garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage rear front main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
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main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage front main structure rear main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing
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main structure main structure front rear main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage front main structure rear main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage rear front main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing non-contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
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main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage non-contributing non-contributing non-contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
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main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage rear front main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure rear main structure garage front main structure rear front main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure garage rear front main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
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rear main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage rear front main structure main structure garage main structure main structure front main structure rear main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure rear (1) rear (2) rear (3) main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing non-contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
(Expires 5-31-2012)
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main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure rear front garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure main structure main structure contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing
(Expires 5-31-2012)
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main structure garage main structure rear main structure front main structure garage front rear main structure main structure garage rear front main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage rear front main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
(Expires 5-31-2012)
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main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage main structure garage rear front main structure main structure garage main structure rear contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing
(Expires 5-31-2012)
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front main structure main structure garage main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure main structure garage main structure garage main structure main structure garage contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing contributing non-contributing