File #: ID 19-0798    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 11/25/2019 In control: City Council
On agenda: 12/17/2019 Final action: 12/17/2019
Title: Ordinance Designating Thornton Brooks House, 415 Sunset Drive, Owned by Sam and Ashley Simpson, a Guilford County Historic Landmark
Attachments: 1. Letter to Greensboro 11.19.19.pdf, 2. Guilford County_Greensboro_Thornton Brooks House HPO Response 11.13.19.pdf, 3. 19-0798 ORD Thornton Brooks House.pdf
Title
Ordinance Designating Thornton Brooks House, 415 Sunset Drive, Owned by Sam and Ashley Simpson, a Guilford County Historic Landmark

Body
Council Priority: Create an Environment to Promote Economic Development Opportunities and Job Creation, Maintain Infrastructure and Provide Sustainable Growth Opportunities

Department: Planning
Council District: 3

Public Hearing: Yes
Advertising Date/By: December 5, 12, 2019/Planning Department

Contact 1 and Phone: Sue Schwartz, Ext 2149
Contact 2 and Phone: Russ Clegg, Ext 2211

PURPOSE:
A public hearing is required in order to consider the Landmark application for Thornton Brooks House.

BACKGROUND:
The City has received a recommendation from the Guilford County Historic Preservation Commission for designation of the Thornton Brooks House as a Historic Landmark. The designation will include the exterior fa?ades of the house and garage and interior features such as the entrance hall, library, grand staircase, and fireplace surrounds.

The Thornton Brooks House occupies a pivotal site in the Irving Park National Register Historic District. It is significant as a rare example in Greensboro of French Eclectic residential architecture. The house retains its original details and interior spaces and its unique landscape features including a cut-stone creek designed to resemble a moat. The house had fallen into serious disrepair and was at risk of demolition when it was purchased by the current owners and carefully restored to the Secretary of the Interior's Standards.

Landmark designation provides protection for the historic property through the Certificate of Appropriateness process. In return, the owner is eligible for up to a 50% deferral of City and County property taxes. The property tax savings is seen as a way to offset the high cost of restoring and maintaining historic buildings. Landmark designation helps preserve Greensboro's irreplaceable historic resources while helping to maintain the city's unique ide...

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