Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
Archivision Base to Module 13
Preferred Title:
Alice Lee Houses
Image View:
Lee House No. 4, north entry elevation showing entry
Creator:
Irving J. Gill (American architect, 1870-1936)
Location:
site: San Diego, California, United States
Location Note:
No. 1, 3578 7th Avenue; No. 2, 3353 Albatross Street; No. 3, 3574 7th Avenue; No. 4, 3367 Albatross Street
Date:
ca. 1906-1911 (creation)
Cultural Context:
American
Style Period:
Arts and Crafts (movement); Twentieth century
Work Type 1:
house
Classification:
architecture
Material:
wood; concrete; steel; stucco
Technique:
construction (assembling)
Subjects:
architecture; domestic architecture; cottages
Description:
Alice Lee Houses: No. 1, 3578 7th Avenue, 1905; No. 2, 3353 Albatross Street, 1905; No. 3, 3574 7th Avenue, 1906; No. 4, 3367 Albatross Street, 1912. The arrival in 1893 of Irving Gill and his development of a severely stripped-down adaptation of the indigenous adobe Mission-style architecture helped bring a more unified look to San Diego through the work of the many architects who trained in his office. By 1910 Gill had developed his own style, which remained constant until the end of his career. His approach was in part reductivist. Decorative details such as eaves and mouldings are pared away, leaving uninterrupted surfaces inside and out. At a time when the use of reinforced concrete was still a novelty, concrete became Gill?s favourite material as it can be easily moulded, is durable and is conducive to attaining simple effects. He also refined tilt-slab construction techniques and developed his own steel door and window casings, bull noses and lath. (Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordart online.
Image Description:
3367 Albatross Street, Alice Lee House No. 4, 1912
Collection:
Archivision Addition Module Five
Identifier:
1A1-GI-LTC-C10
Rights:
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.

Alice Lee Houses