Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Charles Grilk House

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Built
  
1906

NRHP Reference #
  
84001423

Added to NRHP
  
27 July 1984

MPS
  
Davenport MRA

Opened
  
1906

Charles Grilk House

Location
  
2026 Main St. Davenport, Iowa

Architectural style
  
Dutch Colonial Revival architecture

People also search for
  
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The Charles Grilk House is located in the central part of Davenport, Iowa, United States. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1984.

Contents

History

The house was designed by the Davenport architectural firm of Temple, Burrows & McLane, and is an example of one their more modest designs. It is a reminder that architects also designed houses for people with smaller budgets as well as those who are wealthy and build larger homes. The dwelling was featured in the February 1907 edition of Architectural Review as a "Plaster House." The house was built in 1906 for Charles Grilk and has a history of brief and complicated residency and occupancy patterns.

Architecture

The house is a modified Dutch Colonial Revival Bungalow with an American Craftsman aesthetic in its use of materials and the self-contained efficiency of its plan. The 1½-story, frame house, follows a rectangular plan. It features a narrow, molded cornice; side-gambrel roof; and two dormers on the front. The main entrance into the house is flanked by sidelights and covered by a flared eave. There is a polygonal-bay next to the main entry.

References

Charles Grilk House Wikipedia