The John Uri Lloyd House is a historic building in Cincinnati , Ohio , listed on the US National Register of Historic Places on March 7, 1973 [1] . Located near the University of Cincinnati campus.
| House | |
| John Uri Lloyd House | |
|---|---|
| John Uri Lloyd House | |
| A country | |
| Location | 3901 Clifton Avenue, Cincinnati , Hamilton County (Ohio) [1] |
| Architectural style | |
| Architect | |
| Key dates | |
| 1888 - designed | |
| Famous inhabitants | Lloyd John Uri |
The building was designed in the (created by Henry Hobson Richardson ) for the coal and coke merchant in 1888. [2] Like other buildings in this style, it is characterized by massive stone walls, contrasting colors, short Romanesque columns and a turret protruding from the main structure of the building. There is also an arched semicircular Diocletian window , which is found in other buildings in this style. [3] [2]
After World War I, American pharmacist John Uri Lloyd moved into the house with his family, in whose honor the building got its name. Now the psychologist Ellen Bierhorst lives in the house, whose parents purchased the building in 1957. [2]
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 ASSET METADATA, Lloyd, John Uri, House . npgallery.nps.gov . National Register of Historic Places. Date of treatment 2019.02.08.
- ↑ 1 2 3 Ellen Bierhorst Ph. D. Historic Lloyd House Building. The Lloyd House . www.lloydhouse.com (2009.07.12). Date of treatment 2019.02.08.
- ↑ Chuck LaChiusa. Roman / Romanesque / Romanesque Revival . Romanesque Revival in America: Richardsonian Romanesque 1870-1900 . http://buffaloah.com/ , Buffalo as an Architectural Museum . Date of treatment February 10, 2019. Archived February 10, 2019.