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This California mission style house is one of the few examples of
Spanish architecture in Cleveland Heights. While the style was popular in
California from1890 on, in the eastern suburbs most of the homes in this style
were built between 1905 and 1920. This beautifully kept example was built in
1911 for George Kreidler,1 who held various offices at Root and
McBride, a local dry goods manufacturing company. Unfortunately, the architect
is unknown.
The house has suffered many vicissitudes in the past. When the present
owner purchased it in 1975, it had survived a major fire and was known in the
neighborhood as the "ghost house." For some years there had been no running
water or electricity, although the house was occupied. (One might prefer not to
dwell on the consequences of that situation.) Today, after what was clearly an
extensive renovation, the house is a model of tranquility and order.
On the first floor, one enters into a large reception hall, with
oak-paneled offices on either side and an open staircase leading to the living
quarters on the second floor. A patio and covered swimming pool fill in the
original U-shaped floor plan.
On the second floor, a formal dining room and an informal kitchen flow
together. It is here that a major structural change had taken place. A
pass-through pantry and a staircase have been eliminated, and only the chimney,
with its exposed brick, separates the two rooms. In the living room, a feature
not to miss is the massive floor-to-ceiling mirror, salvaged from a local home.
A comfortable family room/sunroom houses collections of Toby mugs and African
sculpture, plus an antique model of a sailing ship. In the master suite, an
elegant Jacuzzi is flanked by original paintings.
Of the many paintings and sculptures in the house, the most prominent
are the Nakian sculptures, many of them abstract interpretations of Greek
mythological characters.
1The 1980 Tour booklet states: It was built
in 1911 for Frank A. Scott, who rose in the ranks of Warner & Swasey Co. to
be President and Chairman of the Board from 1920 to 1928. Additional information from the same source: Mission
architecture proliferated throughout southern California and the Southwest
during the turn of the century — the same period that the Georgian Revival was
at its zenith on the East Coast — and this home presents its salient features:
white stucco walls, low pitched tile roof, a semi-circular entry arch free of
molding, a pyramidal tile roof on the right tower, and a complete absence of
ornament. |