60 Prospect Drive

Also listed as 3 Canyon Circle

Southeast corner Prospect Drive.

Park Hill West (c. 2006)

approx. p. 27

Two-and-one half story, shingle and random rubble, Craftsman style residence; rectangular plan; eyebrow-shaped entrance porch supported on consoles; wraparound porch, glazed with multiple lights, supported on random rubble piers; tripartite and banked six-over-six double hung sash windows; oriel and bay windows; multiple intersecting gabled slate roofs with exposed rafter ends; shed roof dormers; random rubble chimney; hipped roof wing.

Significance: Park Hill West (c. 2006), pp. 48-58, cites this as one of the few notable exceptions to the district's generally utilitarian post-World War I garages, illustrating a secondary structure given more attention to siting or design.

Feature: One story, one-car, random-rubble and shingled, hipped roof garage; shed-roofed entrance porch; oriel window; gabled roof with exposed rafter ends.

Park Hill (2002)

approx. pp. 132-134

2 1/2-story rectilinear house; rubblestone first story; upper floors with bands of overlapping shingles (three courses to each band); entrance faces east; entrance set beneath eyebrow hood; entrance flanked by triple multi-pane windows; large second-story rectangular window divided into three sections, each with 21 panes; multiple sloping roofs; front facade with pair of gables flanking sloping roof with shed dormer; gable windows with attached planters; one-story stn porch to north with rubblestone piers and multi-pane glazing; one-story wing to south with hip roof and oriel; oriels on rear elevation; peak and jerkinhead gables on rear elevation; slate roof slopes; stone chimney; rubblestone retaining wall with iron fence.

Feature: Garage; two-story, one-car hip-roof garage faced with rubblestone and shingle; oriel; peak roof with shed dormers; clock on facade.

Significance: Park Hill (2002), pp. 742-755, cites the c. 1911 Arts and Crafts garage adjoining 3 Canyon Circle as an early garage echoing the style and materials of its associated house.

Park Hill (1984)

approx. pp. 380-381

This 2 1/2 story house is an excellent example of the Shingle Style, with a slate gabled roof and multiple cross gables, multiple shed-roofed dormers, bay and oriel windows, eyelid and shaped hood on consoles at entrance, vergeboards, side section with hip roof, and large double height window.

Feature: Garage

Surveyor: Alina Rodescu ยท Builder: American Real Estate Company

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