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Built in 1924, this Arts and Crafts-style bungalow features a buff brick exterior, side gable roof with a front gable, an integrated garden gateway, an arched front dormer with casement windows, one-over-one windows, a front picture window, a front door with an octagonal window under an awning with an arched roof and paired brackets, a side screen porch, and a concrete base.

Built in 1915, this Neoclassical-style house features a side gable roof with a large front gable pediment over the two-story front portico, a red brick exterior, rusticated stone base, stone lintels and sills, dentils at the base of the roof of the house, a fanlight transom above a window on the south gable, a metal fire escape attached to the rear facade, a front door with decorative glass sidelights, a decorative glass transom, and a decorative header with brackets and a pediment, replacement windows, and a large two-story ionic front portico with round columns, a cornice and architrave above the columns, and a fanlight attic window in the center of the front pediment.

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.

Kope Formation reference section.

 

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 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 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 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 in 1923, this Dutch Colonial Revival-style house features a side gambrel roof, shed dormers, wooden shingle cladding, replacement windows, a concrete block base, and a front gabled porch with an arched roof and tapered square columns.

Built around the turn of the 20th Century, these Queen Anne-style houses feature front gable roofs, front porches, rusticated stone bases, and modifications to their original designs. The houses have mostly been converted into commercial business buildings, owing to the increased commercialization of the surrounding segment of Fort Thomas Avenue.

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