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Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built in 1890, this Queen Anne-style house features a hipped slate roof, cylindrical roof dormer over the front entrance clad in slate shingles with a conical roof, doric pilasters, and casement windows, a front gabled dormer with an arch above the window with decorative trim, paired doric columns on either end of the dormer, a masonry railing with circular openings, one-over-one double-hung windows with storm windows, rusticated stone lintels, stone sills, a painted brick exterior, a rusticated stone base, and a partially enclosed front porch with doric columns and pilasters, a hipped roof, decorated pediment over the front entrance steps, and rusticated stone column base piers and railings. The house has been converted into a commercial business building, owing to the increased commercialization of the surrounding segment of Fort Thomas Avenue.

Built in 1889, this Queen Anne-style house features a side gable roof with a smaller front gable, half-timbering on the gable ends and dormers, dormers with front gables and pointed casement windows, a diamond pane attic window on the front gable, painted brick exterior, large decorative brackets, replacement windows, stone lintels and sills, a second-story balustrade below a feature window, double-hung windows on the side gables with complex mullions, a painted rusticated stone base, a front door with decorative glass sidelights and a decorative glass transom, and a front porch with a hipped roof, square columns, decorative trim, and a complex decorative railing.

Kope Formation reference section. Upper Brent Submember?

 

Built in 1926, this Colonial Revival-style cottage features a side gable roof with a front gable over the front porch, a red brick exterior, an arched fanlight attic window over the front porch with a decorative keystone, a front gable dormer on the roof beside the front gable, stone sills, a concrete block base, replacement windows, and a front porch with brick columns, a front gable roof, and a concrete floor.

Built between 1890 and 1892, these Queen Anne-style houses and duplexes were constructed as housing for officers at the former US Army base at Fort Thomas, which was active from 1890 until 1964. The houses feature an eclectic mix of Queen Anne elements, with unifying features being typically complex rooflines with multiple gables or hipped sections, stone trim, brick exteriors, rusticated stone bases, offset corner and front porches, stone lintels and sills, double-hung one-over-one and two-over-two windows, and bay windows in one and two story variants. Some of the houses feature more unique elements, including cylindrical turrets with conical roofs, jerkinhead or clipped gable roofs with attic oriel windows on the ends of the gables, clapboard-clad upper portions of the exterior facades, and quarter-circle attic windows. After sitting vacant since 2002, the houses were all rehabilitated between 2018 and 2020, with the addition of one-story basement additions housing garages to the rear of each house, all featuring rooftop decks, a new infill house in a compatible postmodern interpretation of the original house designs, and restoration of all intact character-defining features of the houses. The houses, minus the one built in 2020, are contributing structures in the Fort Thomas Military Reservation Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Built between 1890 and 1892, these Queen Anne-style houses and duplexes were constructed as housing for officers at the former US Army base at Fort Thomas, which was active from 1890 until 1964. The houses feature an eclectic mix of Queen Anne elements, with unifying features being typically complex rooflines with multiple gables or hipped sections, stone trim, brick exteriors, rusticated stone bases, offset corner and front porches, stone lintels and sills, double-hung one-over-one and two-over-two windows, and bay windows in one and two story variants. Some of the houses feature more unique elements, including cylindrical turrets with conical roofs, jerkinhead or clipped gable roofs with attic oriel windows on the ends of the gables, clapboard-clad upper portions of the exterior facades, and quarter-circle attic windows. After sitting vacant since 2002, the houses were all rehabilitated between 2018 and 2020, with the addition of one-story basement additions housing garages to the rear of each house, all featuring rooftop decks, a new infill house in a compatible postmodern interpretation of the original house designs, and restoration of all intact character-defining features of the houses. The houses, minus the one built in 2020, are contributing structures in the Fort Thomas Military Reservation Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Built in 1941, this Art Moderne-style building was built to house the Citizen’s Telephone Company Hiland Exchange, and replaced the earlier phone exchange further north along Fort Thomas Avenue. The building features a red flemish bond brick exterior with a limestone-clad base, low slope roof surrounded by a parapet with a stone cap, a series of five window bays infilled with glass block in a decorative pattern on two levels at the center of the front facade, separated by fluted limestone pilasters, with contrasting stone spandrel panels that feature bells and telephones above the upper row of windows, and closed-up window bays with recessed stacked bond brick spandrel panels on the side and rear facades of the building. The building remains in active service as a telecommunications exchange, providing communication services to the surrounding area of Campbell County.

Built in 1920, this eclectic cottage features a side gable roof, front and rear shed dormers, stucco cladding, semi-circular attic vents, casement windows, an enclosed side porch, a concrete base, and a two-story front porch with two large doric columns on the first floor, a second level with grouped square doric columns, and a shed roof, with french doors providing access to the second story porch.

Built in the early 20th Century, this commercial building features a painted brick exterior, stepped front parapet, decorative brick and stone trim not he second floor, replacement windows, a mid-20th century first floor modern storefront, an oriel window on the side facade, a rusticated stone base, and a rear shed roof.

Built between the late 19th Century opening of Fort Thomas and World War II, these commercial buildings make up the Midway Commercial District, which sits adjacent to the former military installation at Fort Thomas. The buildings are all within the Fort Thomas Commercial Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Around the top of the Brent, base of the Pioneer Valley.

Built circa 1890, this Queen Anne-style house features a front and side slate shingle jerkinhead or clipped gable roof, a semi-circular side oriel window clad in shingles with a curved palladian window, half-timbering with gothic motifs on the gable ends and gabled roof dormers, red brick exterior, rusticated stone base a semi-circular two-story front bay window, one-over-one double-hung windows, a front door with decorative glass sidelights and transoms, a two-story side bay window with a chimney, a wrap-around rear porch, and a front porch with decorative octagonal columns and trim, a hipped roof, metal railings, and a rusticated stone base and stone column piers.

Built in 1925, this Arts and Crafts-style bungalow features a hipped roof with wide overhanging eaves, gabled front and rear dormers, tapered window trim, wooden shingle cladding, a rusticated stone base, eight-over-one, six-over-one, and four-over-one double-hung windows with storm windows, and a front porch with a shed roof and a concrete base.

Built in the early 20th Century, this commercial building features a painted brick exterior, stepped front parapet, decorative brick and stone trim not he second floor, replacement windows, a mid-20th century first floor modern storefront, an oriel window on the side facade, a rusticated stone base, and a rear shed roof.

Built around the turn of the millennium, this commercial complex replaced an earlier block of commercial buildings on the same site, most of which were built in the mid-20th Century. The postmodern-style complex features elements of the Tudor Revival style, including half-timbering on the gable ends and exterior panels, stone trim and red brick exteriors, and a plaza at the corner of Fort Thomas Avenue and Lumley Avenue with a clocktower made of an open steel structure with stone base piers.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built initially in 1909-10, this Gothic Revival-style church was designed by C. C. Weber for the congregation of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The church features a rusticated stone exterior, front red tile shingle gable roof with gable parapets, gothic arched stained glass windows, a front narthex with a crenellated and gabled stone parapet, a front entry storefront door with a gothic arched top, buttresses, a side entry door with a stone parapet, two gothic arched windows above, and a blind gothic arch over the doors, replacement windows, a first-floor bay window on the side facade along Fort Thomas Avenue, and side and rear additions made in the early 20th Century and 1990s that feature rusticated stone exteriors and parapets, matching the architecture of the original church building as closely as possible.

Built around the turn of the 20th Century, this Queen Anne-style house features a hipped roof with gable ends clad in shingles, an oxeye attic window on the front gable, a palladian attic window on the side gable, decorative brackets below the gable ends, two-story bay windows below the front and side gables, replacement windows, a rusticated stone base, a front porch with doric columns and a rooftop balcony, and a side oriel window with decorative support brackets. The house has been converted into a commercial business building, owing to the increased commercialization of the surrounding segment of Fort Thomas Avenue.

Built in the late 19th Century, this wood-frame Queen Anne-style house was later expanded with a first-floor red brick retail addition on the front and side in the early 20th Century as the area became increasingly commercialized. The building features a hipped roof with multiple gables, a hipped roof dormer, an arched attic window, replacement windows, asbestos cladding on the exterior of the building, a one-story bay window on the side of the house, and a one-story red wire brick commercial addition on the front of the building with a parapet, two retail spaces, and concrete base.

Built in the early 20th Century, this commercial building features a painted brick exterior, stepped front parapet, decorative brick and stone trim not he second floor, replacement windows, a mid-20th century first floor modern storefront, an oriel window on the side facade, a rusticated stone base, and a rear shed roof.

Built in 1920, this eclectic cottage features a side gable roof, front and rear shed dormers, stucco cladding, semi-circular attic vents, casement windows, an enclosed side porch, a concrete base, and a two-story front porch with two large doric columns on the first floor, a second level with grouped square doric columns, and a shed roof, with french doors providing access to the second story porch.

Built circa 1890, this Queen Anne-style building features a low-slope rear shed roof, a circular corner turret, made of wood and clad in faux brick made of pressed metal sheets, topped with a conical slate roof and finial, stone belt coursing at the lintels and sills of the front facade windows, a cornice with decorative dentils, brackets, and panels, replacement windows, arched window openings on the second floor of the front facade with arched panels above the windows and arches consisting of decorative brick and stonework, brick pilasters on the front facade terminating in cornice brackets on the ends and a stone cap in the center, a pilaster on the side next to the turret that terminates in brackets matching the front cornice, a rear ell with simpler exterior detailing, and a first-floor addition with a low-slope hipped roof, decorative pilasters that terminate in brackets, and plate glass storefront windows with transoms. The building is a contributing structure in the Fort Thomas Commercial Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.

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