Monthly Archives: January 2011

Rowhouse History

A couple months ago I bought a book off of Amazon which I thought would be a good coffee table book as it is about the history of the rowhouse in Baltimore, but when it arrived I found that it was more then just a picture book.

The book is called The Baltimore Rowhouse and is written by Mary Ellen Hayward and Charles Belfoure.  When the book came I found it to be a wealth of information on the architecture of this city’s homes that I never imagined existed.  The book is chopped up into time periods and styles of architecture.  Some time periods and styles over lap, but it was relatively easy to identify which classification mine falls under.

Built in 1875 and in the South Baltimore neighborhood of Locust Point, my house was constructed in the Italianate Period (1850-1890).  This was a time period which saw a rise in construction of houses for working-class families around areas of industry.  The book said that at this time transportation was still too expensive for people to live further than walking distance to their jobs, so people lived very close to work.

The book gives very detailed explanations of what was going on in each time period and even more detail into the reasons why various architectural elements were incorporated into the homes constructed at this time.

I do a lot of walking around the neighbourhood these days with Huey and I had always wondered about the little things that separated one block of rowhouses from the next. 

One of the reasons I bought my house was that it measures close to 14′ wide.  If you have ever been in one of the smaller alley houses they can get as small as 10′ when both walls are studded.  The book says that when they developed the working-class house there were two bay and three bay wide homes ranging in width from 12 – 14′.   Each of the homes had “six rooms and most had low basements.”  The three-bay versions were built on main streets, which explains why mine is close to 14′ wide as it is on Fort Avenue which is a very wide street in comparison to some others as it stretches from all the way down past Federal Hill and runs straight into fort McHenry.

The book also explains that “in the three-bay versions a tiled entrance vestibule led into a narrow hall, which opened into the front parlor (measuring 9′ x 12′) and back to the stairs and the dining room.  The kitchen was at the rear of the house, beyond the dining room.”  If you look back to my posts on the Living Room and the Kitchen you can see my house was identical to this layout, right down to the front parlor, tiled vestibule and kitchen at the rear.

I had always wondered why the house was chopped up as it was downstairs.  The book summed it all up in this statement:

“In a house so very narrow, it is very telling that the builders crowded in an entrance vestibule, hall, and formal parlor, sacrificing crucial living space space to preconceived notions of how life should be lived properly.”

The beginning sections of the book describes the opulence and detail that went into the grand rowhomes in Mt. Vernon, etc. so it is easy to see why my house was built the way it was.  The builders wanted even the common man to be able to on some level experience the way the wealthier lived.  It was a “striking reminder of the pervasive desire among all income levels of Baltimoreans to have style in their houses.”

Some of the less noticeable things I learned were that some houses built by builders with a bit more money, had “cut-stone facing at the basement level,” which explains why unlike some homes which have fronts constructed entirely from brick, mine has marble at the sidewalk level.  Mine also has big blocks of the same stone running under both the large front window and the windows upstairs.

The interior trim and details were mostly mass produced at the time and were less expensive knock-offs echoing the design of higher cost elements.

The book even featured the text of a realtor’s 1885 ad to home owners or investors:

“Five new six-room dwellings, one vacant, the other four rented; will pay 14 per cent; stoves in parlors, ranges, bath-room, hot and cold water, gas fixtures, etc.; nicely papered throughout; price only $700 each.”

Hard to imagine where my original bathroom was, what type of gas fixtures were hooked up to the piping found throughout the first floor, and what a stove looked like in my parlor.  Even more difficult to imagine… $700!!!!  I could have done some crazy things to this place had it cost $700. Haha.

Reading this book led me to dig even deeper into the history of my house using the state/city websites to research the deed.  There is a tremendous amount of information available online (for free).  I started with the last deed number shown on my real property tax levy and went back from there.  The house changed hands a ton of times going all the way back to the late 1800′s when the deed only referred to my entire block of Fort Avenue.  I have probably well exceeded my word limit here as I usually like to have more pictures than words, so I will save the in depth history of my home for another time.

As much as I had hoped this was gona be a post about kitchen cabinet hardware, it wasn’t.  It seems as though I’m stuck in a holding pattern with a lot of the things I want to accomplish.  Every week something else seems to come up.  Part of the reason I didn’t even make it to Ikea was Locust Point Rowhouse’s 4-legged, stinky, slobbering….and as of late, still bothered by cherry eye. 

The eye looks relatively good here, but closer examination its a real (no pun intended) “eye sore.”  The surgery I had for him 2 weeks ago failed.  He’s having surgery again this week to try and get it right this time.  I feel bad for the guy as I’ve had to drag him to the damn vet what seems like once a week.  He’s not in any pain from what I can tell, but its gross to look at and not good to leave it untreated.  His other eye has shown signs of doing the same thing so they are going to pre-emptively fix the other eye in the hopes that we can be done with this nonsense because really, he’s a pretty well behaved dog.  He sure has much more energy and athleticism then I imagined a bulldog to have, but I guess I just lucked out.  Haha.

Oh and the other reason nothing got done was a cracked rim on my car…but that’s not in the least bit interesting.

Completed Stairs

They are finally finished.  Well…at least as good as they are going to get.  I certainly learned an important lesson with this aspect of the home reno.  That lesson is with something as monumental as replacing the stair in a house, be sure to buy one that is pre-finished.

It would be extremely depressing to know really how many hours went into finishing these stairs.  While it did save money, it certainly wasted time.  From covering them with cardboard and painters tape 2 times, to taping and untaping various sections as we transitioned from stain to paint, it took forever.  As I said in a previous post, if you are looking to save $, don’t downgrade to pine treads.  My decision to save $600-800 or so dollars to have cheaper materials actually added multiple hours of prep and limited my finish selections.  That being said, I think things turned out as well as they could with regards to appearance and how well it matched the 135 yr old heart pine floors.

Since I have been living here now for several months, it took some time to get motivated to get to the last step finished which involved taping a portion of the treads so that the spindles could be touched up with white semi-gloss.

Anyways…here are some pictures:


I also did some more painting of upstairs doors and some windows sills.  I decided after talking to some people and some comments from some readers to get my cabinet hardware from IKEA.  I plan on doing that next weekend so hopefully I can finally show the kitchen in a finished state.


Cabinet Pulls

I’ve been putting this off for quite some time.  If the people at HGTV came through my house I can tell you with 110% certainty they’d say my kitchen looked unfinished because it has no knobs/pulls.  While I would agree with them, budgetary cutbacks (sounds like the city of Baltimore) have pushed this to the bottom of the priority list.  However, after countless jokes from my parents and the generous offer to get them for me as a house warming present, I have renewed the search for cabinet pulls.

Probably the most notable joke to date was said by my Dad and went something like this: “You know Matt, I was reading this home magazine and they have this new thing out that helps you open the kitchen cabinets; they’re called knobs.”

As I last left you in the post about the kitchen before and afters, this is how the kitchen stands, minus whatever minor accessories added in the last few months:

I have pretty much always been interested in the following two options:

The first being an option from Top Knobs, a company that Canton Kitchens recommended and uses frequently.  It is very similar to a product Ikea carries.  I was told though to avoid the Ikea products as their mounting hardware can be problematic.  Top Knobs seems to offer these in a wide variety of lengths starting at around $7 and going up from there with size.

The second option is from Restoration Hardware.  It is called the Spritz Pull and comes in polished stainless steel or brushed satin stainless steel in lengths of 3″, 4″, 6″, and 8″ with prices ranging in the $9.50 – $15 range.  I’m thinking once I start doing the math, these may been too expensive, but anyways here’s what it looks like…website only had it shown in polished stainless…

Probably what kept me from ordering anything the last 6 attempts at this (besides the cost) is deciding on the length of each bar pull.  I measured at one point but I’m guessing the paper I wrote it on is long gone.

Restoration Hardware’s sizing might make it easier for me to decide though as they limit you to the above mentioned sizes.  I have found a couple examples of how they can be sized and am starting to lean in one direction, so maybe this will be resolved soon after all.

Here they have kept them relatively small, and from what I can tell, all the same size:

 
These are a bit larger, but still all look to be the same size:

This is one of the only pictures I could find of someone making them almost the entire length of the cabinet front.  I like it but think it may be a little excessive and the thought of how much the 4 pulls on the pantry would cost makes me think this won’t work.

Any thoughts?

I’m thinking maybe I go with something like 6″ on all the upper and lower cabinets and something like 4″ on the drawer fronts (which I have few of). 

I hope to make some final measurements and order something this weekend.

In other news, I did some significant research on the house going back to before my block was even a block…pre 1875 info…using deed numbers and a lot of squinting and deciphering old cursive handwriting.  I am trying to figure out one gap between the late 20′s and mid 30′s and then I will post some info on how the house changed ownership over the years and the various $ amounts it changed hands for.  I learned a lot of interesting things and even found out that the house (and house next door) may have been a “business” of sorts during prohibition.

Stay tuned.  Hopefully as winter rolls to an end I will be able to start some new projects.