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INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON s SYLVIA STREET <br /> MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No. <br /> 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125 <br /> 2268 <br /> ❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. <br /> If checked,you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form. <br /> Use as much space as necessary to complete the following entries, allowing text to flow onto additional continuation sheets. <br /> ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION: <br /> Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community. <br /> 5 Sylvia Street occupies a small, narrow lot near the corner of Massachusetts Avenue. The building is set on the rear property <br /> line, with narrow side setbacks and long front yard, maintained mostly in lawn with scattered shrubs. A chain link fence <br /> surrounds the perimeter of the front lawn. A long paved driveway extends down the south (left) side of the property, between the <br /> street and the house. The street slopes up steeply from Mass. Ave., but the lot is terraced with a poured concrete retaining wall <br /> along the north (right)side of the level driveway. The front yard slopes up gently from the street to the house. <br /> The rectangular building rises 2 '/2 stories from a stone foundation to a steeply pitched, side gable roof with no returns and a <br /> slender chimney centered on the front slope, near the ridgeline. Walls are sheathed in vinyl. Windows typically have 1/1 double <br /> hung sash. A narrow, one-story, hip roofed addition wraps around the east(fagade) and south (left side) elevations. A modern <br /> wood deck with square wood balusters at the railing extends most of the length of the front fagade. <br /> The front facade (east elevation) has two entrances set at the outer ends of the one-story appendage, each with a single-leaf <br /> door. A small double hung window is set between the southern entrance and the driveway corner of the building. A wood <br /> stairway leads from the northern doorway to the front lawn. Set asymmetrically in between the entrances is a triplet of casement <br /> windows. The second story of the fagade contains a symmetrical pair of widely spaced windows, surmounted by two narrow <br /> flush dormers, each with a steeply gabled roof and a single window. <br /> The north (right side) elevation contains a four-panel, modern bow window at the first story, two symmetrical windows on the <br /> second story, and one centered in the half story. The south (left side) elevation has no fenestration in the first story projection, <br /> one offset window on the second floor, and one centered in the half story. The irregular west (rear) elevation contains four 1/1 <br /> windows of varied sizes; its long, shed roofed dormer displays an offset pair of glider windows. <br /> 5 Sylvia Street is a modest example of vernacular residential development in Lexington. It is notable for its deep front setback, <br /> vertical proportions, and gabled fagade dormers. It has lost significant historic integrity through the application of vinyl siding, <br /> loss of original trim, and altered fenestration. <br /> HISTORICAL NARRATIVE <br /> Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local(or state)history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the <br /> owners/occupants played within the community. <br /> The small grid of streets bordered by Massachusetts Avenue, Hibbert Street, Taft Avenue, and Bowker Street represents an <br /> early area of suburban infill in East Lexington, near the Arlington town line. Immediately south of Taft Avenue is Liberty Heights <br /> (LEX.Q), a hilltop subdivision laid out by Brookline developer Jacob W. Wilbur in 1909 and developed in the teens and twenties. <br /> The growth of both these neighborhoods followed the arrival of the electric street railway on Massachusetts Avenue in 1899 and <br /> was directed at working class residents. <br /> In the area adjacent to Massachusetts Avenue known as Dexter Hillside, Hibbert and Sylvia streets, which straddle the <br /> Lexington/Arlington line, were laid out, platted, and partially developed by 1898. The only other evidence of development here at <br /> that time is the L-shaped beginning of Charles and Cherry streets, where ten house lots were laid out but vacant. By 1927, both <br /> Charles and Bowker streets extended from Massachusetts Avenue to Taft Avenue, and the western ends of Cherry Street, <br /> Stevens (then Cary) Road, and Camden (then Smythe) Street pushed a few lots eastward from Charles. Development was <br /> gradual through the 1920s and 30s and was virtually complete, with the full network of present streets, by 1950. <br /> Continuation sheet I <br />