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HPB Sewell C Biggs House
Page Separator Designation Report Historic Preservation Board Delray Beach Florida The Sewell C Biggs House Box # 43 Folder # 2 Delray SO 8373 it II . I Table of Contents 111 I. GENERAL INFORMATION II. LOCATION MAP III. NOT APPLICABLE IV. HISTORICAL JIB � AND CULTURAL SIGNIFICANCE etr V. ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE I L I f: VI. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE VII. BIBLIOGRAPHY AND SOURCES VIII. ATTACHMENTS a1 a a� Report Prepared By: IJ Dorothy W. Patterson Arl 1206 NE Second Avenue R Delray Beach, FL 33444 (561) 278-2191 (home) 274-9578 (Archives) 717-3425 (cell) E-mail summerpatt©earthlink.net Date of Report: April 20, 2005 Name of Owners: Erskine H. and Virginia W. Courtenay 212 Seabreeze Avenue Delray Beach, Florida 33483 ty t1 1 y5 11 I1 U I. General Information a a Address The Sewell C. Biggs House, named for its original owner, is located at 212 Seabreeze Avenue within the city limits of Delray Beach, Florida. Legal Description Lot 21 and the west 35 feet of Lot 22, Delray Beach Esplanade, according to the plat thereof, as recorded in Plat Book 18, page 39, Public Records of Palm Beach County, Florida. Location Lots 21 and 22 are at the end of Seabreeze Avenue. A driveway at this point leads to the front entrance of the Courtenay home. The lots are bounded by Lot 26 of Ocean Breeze Estates on the south and Vista Del Mar Drive South on the north. At the time of construction in 1955 the front entrance faced Vista Del Mar Drive South. This area is on the barrier island between the Intra-coastal Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean. li Zoning Single Family Residential Classification for Designation We believe that the Sewell C. Biggs House, designed by esteemed mid- century modern architect, Paul Rudolph, meets the criteria for both architectural and cultural significance for the reasons described in the following pages of the report. ri f1 ft fl fly ii I W r , e F 3 b II. Location Map c To be provided by City of Delray Beach. f P f gii. 1 11 I f, qqt C r 3 i F r Q iN , [I i III District Inventory Not applicable r 1 !II 1, .I J J I N IV. Historical and Cultural Significance .I Before 1895 the lots where the Sewell C. Biggs House is located were part - u of a semitropical wilderness between the coastal ridge and a swampy 1 morass. Less than two blocks away from the lots the coastal ridge begins. 1 The first construction known in the area was the Orange Grove House of 4 Refuge built by the U.S. Life SavingService (precursor to the Coast Guard) in 1876. The former site of the House of Refuge is a short walk from the .. Briggs House. : h , • zr ' The Refuge keeper's son, Charles Pierce, described the land around the Refuge House as follows: The house... was built on a broad flat that ran �' - J back from the open sand d beach to the higher ridge behind the house...At the tiOrange Grove it was covered with a thick growth of saw palmetto. The flat was covered with sea oats and scattered bunches of stunted seagrape and cocoplum. This flat extended north two and one-half miles and ended at the caves; to the south it stretched for nearly four miles ... To the west, commencing at the foot of the palmetto-covered ridge, was a deep swamp of tall sawgrass with numerous small channels turning about its eastern side. The morass was about half a mile wide and extended from Lake Worth to Boca Raton; west of it were pinewoods reaching back as far as one could see." The Pierce family encountered deer, bear and heard panthers screaming in the night. They killed the bears for food. After settlement by Americans of European descent began, the area was used for farming such crops as strawberries, pineapples, mangoes and o tomatoes. Beginning with the mid-1920's Florida Real Estate Boom, the land became more valuable for residential housing. Or as Adolf Hofman said in one of his letters home to Germany, "Since Delray is growing and the lots fetch colossal prices, I will divide my land between canal and railroad into lots." One of first the farmers in the area, Adolf Hofman developed the Ocean Breeze Estates subdivision adjoining Delray Beach Esplanade, in 1937. Local attorney Ernest Simon recalls that in the late 1930's and early 1940's when he was delivering the De/ray Beach News on his bicycle, there were only a few houses in the area. Delray Beach Esplanade, the subdivision where the Briggs House is located, was platted in 1938 by H. H. and Charlotte Wellenbrink and Williard and Billie Waters. The Waters were well-known in Delray Beach. Wiiiard Waters was a building contractor who q had graduated from Delray High School. His family lived at 222 N. Ocean lJ • • 1 4' I and farmed land on the barrier island in the early years of the 20t" century. Waters was also active in city politics and civic clubs. After World War II, building in the neighborhood began in earnest. Tom Woolbright, who went into the building business for himself in 1949,recalls spending the 1947 hurricane in a house in the neighborhood. He said the area was pretty well built up by then and that Willard Waters built many of the houses. Mr. Woolbright remembers that H.H. Wellenbrink was "the t4 money man" who paid for improvements such as building roads, filling land, o and paying engineering fees for the plat. Roy Simon, native of Delray Beach, was an apprentice architect in the 1950s for local architect, Ken Jacobson. He recalls that Vista del Mar (Delray Beach Esplanade) was fairly built up by then. After he saw the Paul Rudolph designed house under construction, he and other architects were enthusiastic about the chance of designing contemporary housing. However, he said, "I seemed to keep drawing nice cottages." There were many important clients for houses in the neighborhood such as CEO's of nationally known corporations, famous professional golfers and prominent Delray Beach citizens. The clients loved the smallness and "laid-back" atmosphere of Delray Beach. But evidently they did not have the artistic sensibilities of • Sewell C. Biggs and did not request avant garde contemporary designs. • James Sinks, a local building contractor, constructed architect Paul Rudolph's • • design. According to Ernie Simon, Sinks had a reputation for being a "good • builder." Jim Sinks father, Irwin J. Sinks, was also a builder originally from • • Champaign, Illinois. During World War I he went to work for the U.S. Government and was sent to Charleston, S.C. to build soldiers' barracks. In Charleston he roomed with Fred J. Schrader from Delray Beach. Schrader a was the first builder in Delray with architectural training. He came to town " in 1911 and built the town's first jail, the Cromer Block on Atlantic Avenue and the original part of the Presbyterian Church on Gleason Street. Schrader encouraged Sinks to come to Delray. In 1922 after another assignment in Miami, the Sinks family moved to Delray. The Sinks, father and son, Delray builders of their time, had a long record of building in Delray Beach. The elder Sinks built many of the structures on or near Atlantic Avenue such as the Masonic Building, the 1926 High School, the Wuepper Building, the Casa del Ray Hotel, and the Arcade Building. Jim built the Atha Building which replaced the Cromer Building. Laura Sinks Britt said in her book, My Gold Coast, "My father had become a Laura Sinks Britt said in her book, My Gold Coast, "My father had become a builder of more structures on Atlantic Avenue than any other one contractor and Jim added his score." Today some of the "nice cottages," which fit gently into subdivision-sized lots on the short winding streets of the neighborhood, are being torn down to make way for large estate style homes. At present we do not know the exact circumstances of how Sewell C. Biggs came to build a house in Delray Beach and chose Paul Rudolph as his 2 architect. He has been described as "enigmatic" and not easy to know. A biography of his life is in the process at this time. The curator at the Sewell 0 C. Biggs Museum in Dover, Delaware, said Biggs owned the house about six years. The Delray Beach City Directory lists him as the owner at the address for about nine years. Randy Grover, the curator, was asked to present a retrospective of Biggs life to the museum board when Mr. Biggs died suddenly in 2003 at age 88. Grover said he felt that the story of the house in Delray Beach was a high point of his presentation. The reason for this was that Biggs was known for his collection of 18th and 19th century American art. The house signaled the beginning of a turn toward the 20th century. In fact Sewell Bigg's vision was for his collection to cover the entire range of • American art. Sewell C. Biggs, a northern Delaware native, graduated from the University of Delaware in 1938. He also attended the University of Virginia Law School • and studied architecture at Harvard, Oxford, and Cambridge Universities. In • 1937 he took a trip around the world that had an enduring impact on the rest of his life. After the trip he was interested in international exchange and began to sponsor foreign students for one-year scholarships at the University of Delaware. A serious collector of art, he was also involved in historical preservation and art conservation. Biggs collection of American fine and decorative art has been described as "elegant, wonderful, pristine, remarkable, impressive, and an incredible journey ranging from Colonial portraiture to the Hudson River School." With his vision and eye for quality, Biggs spent most of his life on his American art collection. In 1998 the Biggs Museum of American Art opened in Dover to house his collection which includes Delaware and Delaware Valley fine and decorative arts. The 14 galleries of the museum contain a collection which covers more than 200 years of American fine art and decorative art gems. That same year Biggs established the Sewell C. Il � 1 Biggs Chair in American Art History at the University of Delaware. The title of Ai r an exhibit at the Biggs Museum of American Art says it best --"Artful Living: The Legacy of Sewell C. Biggs." Mr. Biggs sold his house at 212 Seabreeze about 1970 to a New York lawyer and his wife, Richard and Alice McAvoy. Evidently the McAvoy's did not have much time in the house because a Webb Brothers Real Estate information ( sheet is headed Estate of Richard McAvoy. (See attachments) Reference No. 2 on the sheet cites a merit award, medium house class (600-2800 sq. ft.), given in June 1959 by House & Home, an architecture magazine. 1.74 The third and present owners of the house, Virginia and Erskine Courtenay, Ci I bought the house in 1973. Well-known Delray Beach Realtor, Pat Patterson, showed the house. Before becoming a real estate salesman for Ben Adam's Realty, Patterson was known for his pharmacy, his photography, and his volunteer work as a ham radio operator during World War II. Virginia Courtenay says that she "fell in love with the light, being up in the trees, and the architecture. She already greatly admired the work of Paul Rudolph. Mrs. Courtenay's grandfather was a builder in Chicago. She attended the Art Institute of Chicago and has owned an interior design business in Delray Beach for more than 25 years. Erskine Courtenay agreed to the purchase because Virginia loved the house, and he loved her. Paul Rudolph has been sometimes criticized for elevating style at the expense of function and some changes had to be made for practical living. Mr. And Mrs. Courtenay have always wanted and have strived to keep the house as close to the original design as possible. Sensitivity to the original design while making changes has always been an important aspect of planning. In addition Rudolph's Florida houses had been designed just prior 14 to the time when air-conditioning became a standard feature of south Florida ahomes. Some of the innovative design features meant to ameliorate the Florida climate worked against the efficiency of air-conditioning. For example, in the back of the house paneling was installed over the aluminum louver windows because the strength of the wind blowing against the louvers had been a problem at times, and after air-conditioning was installed, the • 1 problems continued. The windows in the front of the original part of the house look the same even though they have been replaced. Paul Rudolph drew a plan for an addition and approved the changes to the house in 1980. (See attachments). However, Rudolph was not aware of the a need to raise the house 4 feet because of a new law which dictated that the house must be 7.5 feet above mean sea level. (Flooding of the lot during the rainy season had occurred at times after original construction in 1955.) Local architect Bob Currie was then hired to plan lifting the house and the addition in 1980-81. The interior of the addition matches the interior of the original house. The original hedges, trees and landscaping remain the same. (See attachments) i U w 4 A U 4 I I 4 4 I 0 F , V. Architectural Significance The architect of the Sewell C. Bigg House in Delray Beach, Paul Rudolph (1918-1997), was an important influence on American modernism in the mid-twentieth century. He was a Kentucky native and son of a Methodist minister. According to C. Ford Peatross, curator of Architecture, Design and Engineering at the Library of Congress, Rudolph drew on many influences for P his Florida work. Z He was open to new and experimental methods of construction-- 4 stretching structural possibilities of materials to their limit's while celebrating their static and aesthetic possibilities, spatial richness, complexity and inter-relationship of the interiors and exteriors... of his buildings, their site, their natural surroundings and their climate. His appreciation of these qualities in both modern architecture and in the vernacular buildings of his native South had been fostered r by E. Walter Burkhardt under whom he studied architecture at Auburn r University (then Alabama Polytechnic Institute). Burkhart ml recommended his student to Walter Gropius who was instrumental in 44 4' Rudolph's admission to Harvard Graduate School of Design. Burkhart ;; was one of the most energetic and enlightened directors of the Historic 4 American Building Survey, now one of the most frequently consulted collections in the Library of Congress. • Mr. Peatross wrote the preface to Paul Rudolph, The Florida Houses. He is well-acquainted with Rudolph's work because the architect bequeathed his professional papers and drawings to the Library and funded the Center of • Architecture, Design and Engineering there. Peatross' accolades include the statement: "Paul Rudolph was a profound influence of the second half of the 20th century and a model of rare integrity who is being rediscovered by a new generation." His assessment of Rudolph's Florida buildings is that the "innovative, adventurous and elegant Florida buildings launched Rudolph's career." Petross further finds in working with drawings of many famous architects in the Library of Congress Collections that "with the exception of Wright; however, I have found none of their graphic works to be as consistently daring, stimulating, accomplished, and often beautiful as those of Paul Rudolph's drawings. His drawings convey his restless intellectual curiosity, his prodigious spatial imagination and, in Phillip Johnson's words, the 'speed of his mind'...Collectively, they represent a treasure chest of lessons, ideas, and possibilities that will speak to and inspire generations to i come." Christopher Domin and Joseph King, authors of Paul Rudolph, The Florida Houses, visited the present owners in Delray Beach. The Courtenays are listed in the Acknowledgments on page 13. The Sewell C. Biggs House is featured in the "Independent Practice" section on page 183 where the house EJ is compared to the "award-winning Cohen House...(1953-1955)" on Siesta Key. The authors' opening statement is: "While coming of age as architects along the west coast of Florida in a landscape increasingly homogenized by air-conditioning and prolific land development, Paul Rudolph's architecture � stood alone in our eyes as a rigorous counter-argument." Domin and King met in the graduate program at the Georgia Institute of Technology. After discovering their shared interest in Rudolph's work, they made their avocation the searching out of buildings designed by Rudolph across the state of Florida. The authors' conclude that "Rudolph's early work in Florida over a 20-year period was a necessary testing round for a multi-layered design methodology of a complex career. The fact that the architect's work was widely publicized at the time played a significant role in national recognition of Rudolph's work. ,k1 The Florida houses are an accessible entry into a formidable career. His work is a compelling example of regionally inspired modernism. The beautiful photographs are seen today in a bittersweet light as we are now all too aware of what happens when a vastly enlarged population of affluent • Americans descends on all too few miles of pristine beaches." The Delray Beach Historical Society featured the Sewell C. Biggs House as one of the components in its "The Art of Architecture in South Florida" exhibit in 1989. One of the displays described how orientation, sun, heat and ventilation were addressed by the design. (See attachments) VI. Statement of Significance The owners, Esrkine H. & Virginia W. Courtenay, wish to nominate their property for the following reason: "After living in it since 1973, are very much like those of the original owner, Mr. Sewell C. Biggs. It ha s as maintained its sense of elegance in its simplicity and its feeling of "dateless" architecture which stands the test of time. In f 1981 we raised the original house four feet to add a lower floor which now houses a library, guest bedroom and laundry room. This was accomplished with the collaboration of local architect, Robert Currie, who was interested in the house for its historical importance." The style of the home is a design, unique to the neighborhood and to Delray Beach, of the artistic work of an architect who was a leader in 20th century American design field. It is the only Paul Rudolph designed building in Delray Beach although Rudolph designed many Florida homes and buildings. It is representative of 20th century regional modernism tailored for the Florida environment. Further the house is an example of the skill of the Sinks construction firm which built some of the best surviving buildings inDelray Beach. Other reasons for designation are that respect shown for the characteristics of our property will draw attention to the need for preservation in Delray Beach's older neighborhoods; the hope that local designation will afford some protection for the house in the future,and to set an example in a neighborhood being pressured by demolitions. In summary the Sewell C. Biggs House is associated with an original owner who was important in preserving, conserving and promoting American fine and decorative arts. His collection spans the more than 200 years that the United States has existed as a country. The property has been followed under Historical and Cultural Significance in this Designation Report throughout the entire history of Delray Beach after 1876. Further it reflects social and economic trends in the community and is indicative of the winter colony of artistic and socially prominent people which has existed in Delray Beach since the 1920's. Since the house at 212 Seabreeze fits comfortably into the history of Delray Beach, and the original owner proved to have the "vision and eye for quality" of a major American art collector, there seems rl no doubt that the house at 212 Seabreeze has historical and cultural significance. - r ca� n I I rl FU (1 CI The design of the house portrays a significant example of the modernism which swept through the state in the years after World War II and embodies the characteristics of mid-century modernism and innovative uses of new materials. It is an example of the work of a leading American architect whose testing round was Florida. The design is both a significant innovation and adaptation to the South Florida environment. 1 1 1 VII. Bibliography & Sources Britt, Laura Sinks, My Gold Coast. Palatka, Florida: Brittany House Publishers, 1984. I � Delray Beach Historical Society Archives. c" to a Delray Beach City Directories, 1953-54, 1955, 1957,1961,1963,1966, ? u 1973, 1976,1979, Miller, Polk, Price & Lee. u a 0 Domin, Christopher & King, Joseph. Paul Rudolph, The Florida Houses. New i York, New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2002. e Hofman, Charles, Letters from Linton. Hollywood, Florida: Legacy Press, 11 2004. e r Palm Beach County Records, Palm Beach County Courthouse, West Palm Beach, Florida. Pierce, Charles W., Pioneer Life in Southeast Florida. Ed. Donald Walter Curl. Coral Gables: University of Miami Press, 1970. Interviews: April, 2005 Erskine H. and Virginia W. Courtenay, property owners. Randolph Grover, Curator, Biggs Museum of American Art Roy Simon, Architect, Delray Beach native Ernest Simon, Attorney, Delray Beach native Tom Woolbright, retired builder, Delray Beach native , , :t Attachments 1 j 1. Photographs Attachments 1 through 9 2. Survey, house plans Attachments 10 through 13 II 1 3. Chain of Title/City Directories Attachment 14 through 15 3 l ' 4. Webb Brothers Info. Sheet Attachment 16 t 5. Art of Architecture Attachments 17 through 25 ,. DBHS Exhibit 3 3 3 a J 1 i II a J 3 3 t J 3 t r 3 4 III 1 I. li 1 i . . ' '-'57'61.41 s'\_,J"--• : 1 i '. . • "I r \ i\ , . f , i \ 1 I \ , . 1 . . .......-- 1 . •,.....„ . _,......_ , , , ,, \c, • 1 ..._ .,..,,...,.. , ...---- ,, \\\\ .... i 1 ..5,' .000•"" 1 \ I+1 , , \, , --__________------------ - - _ 1 i Mr ,'AL.,. whill I, - .— [ • l'r'''sj41 - . _ _=—. ---------;--.'--i 1-', /4- I I .., I I, ) 1 r ' i is.,..._,..:7,,,,, ...1.,_., i II A1--i-ctc.hrne1 4— 1 .' 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LT.):^ r)r_i 1 111111111 4- \s) --0 CO u ( .( i_ u L a 1 I r 4 A f 1 SFr_ IJ Plow g r C f f a r 0 r. r t A a r f 0 r g f 0 f d ,- ' Y'^'� fi ✓ .f . 8 0 g 5) b% e ^ a r . r W a r �� �i�. •. 401430itt A. : _. , r A t g- • r44 ..)Y' • r a , /�j C •' •, i '�� 1. , B 0 ..x, , . , O - - ... , , 4 . , , , . g ;�yli 1 r I - 1 111 a I ✓ 0 +•�i' *3' i 4 1. t/1e i.: $st 40 _ • •il• " V I 1.) j 6 ,Lydg r f w I ...arm..,,. r t r r t f`. r t f, r © Pi' r r p r 7 ✓ t r 0 r p r p r r r a e g r 0 r t ("/ Gkrr-,eh 1 W k-�-\- r t a 1 f t �18.o\p� 1-aoFr0o� � fPG.\rns \- —e, ptan on ' t s ea.b n ree-z� , ye v,e -- t a? 1 f 0 0 i t ✓ a t r f g t t 7 • LEGEND AND NOTES: I VISTA DEL MAR DRIVE SOUTH P A V E D e = CENTERLINE CATCH BASIN +2.7C �— o , RAI+2t4 r2'CONG VALLEY GUTTER CONC. = CONCRETE SET LR OSMx 1 --CONC. 1 Z 3 ARc= 100.03' W.M W'M. = WATER METER 6.501A CA =2°3352" -1-- 35.02' 30.04' 17' RADK/S=2235.00' ,t,< CONC. 3' t7 C.A. = CENTRAL ANGLE • °') 63 ,(P�� NO NUMBS T x ��° N N �o ) I.R. = 5/8"IRON ROD WITH CAP #LB 353 o„s x x x x .‘ x x x .�, — • �t x 02" S.M.H. = STORM MANHOLE 352' �iiiiiiiii/ii/iiiiii� 35.0' = OVERHEAD UTILITY LINES a. x / 29.8' i FLOOR = CHAIN LINK FENCE +7.30 • = WOOD FENCE X ; 2 STORY in !. �. O H ,L RESIDENCE +2.85 = ELEVATION BASED ON NATIONAL GEODETIC VERTICAL DATUM 1929. SOURCE. PALM BEACH #212 ct coNC.—J COUNTY BENCH MARK "M-315" • �o � S A/C PAD L ' `' FLOOD ZONE: AE (EL 7) EN • — 02' T5 3, / 29.8' .ft ----TV .( 1{l�ll�uiii 4.. 35.2' A 4 • CONC- WOOD WALK _' 0 DESCRIPTION: .7' &STEPS i LOT 21 AND THE WEST 35 FEET OF LOT 22, DELRA Y BEACH L !I ESPLANADE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 18, PAGE 39, PUBLIC RECORDS OF PALM BEACH PAVED DRIVE 0.2' COUNTY, FLORIDA. L O T 20 szsz LOT 2 1 L 0 T k 22 NN MAP OF BOUNDARY SURVEY i • 0�`L� I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THIS SURVEY WAS MADE UNDER MY RESPONSIBLE CHARGE gJ° j-BEAH MAW TOP OF AND MEETS THE MINIMUM TECHNICAL STANDARDS AS SET FORTH BY THE FLORIDA SET NAIL AV ROCK D VE NAL ELEVATION+3.16 o° BOARD OF PROFESSIONAL SURVEYORS AND MAPPERS I.N CHAPTER 61G17-6, FLORIDA 146' WEST(NO NUMBR ER) ° ° x `sue ADMINISTRATIVE CODE, PURSUANT TO SECTION 472.027, FLORIDA STATUTES (WITNESS CORNER) IRON GATE `ts. - ' 5'PL8UC UTLITES EASEMEN�- 0' "(7---`" - '.8. 30.0' . 65.0 • •' 146 POLE 10000' 5'PUBLIC ORDRES EASEMENT Pai.4 cp.to ° SET UZ -FENCE O.T WEST PAUL D. ENGLE W AND 0.1'NORTH NOT VALID WITHOUT THE SIGNATURE AND SURVEYOR & MAPPER #5708 THE ORIGINAL RAISED SEAL OF A FLORIDA L 0 T 2 6 LICENSED SURVEYOR AND MAPPER. L N W a. OCEAN BREEZE ESTA TES O'BRIEN, SUITER & O'BRIEN, INC. Z (PLAT BOOK 18, PAGE 36) LAND SURVEYORS CO , - CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORIZATION #LB353 W Q SURVEYOR AND MAPPER IN RESPONSIBLE CHARGE: PAUL D. ENGLE 2601 NORTH FEDERAL HIGHWAY, DELRAY BEACH, FLORIDA 33483 (561) 276-4501 732-3279 FAX 276-2390 25.0' 25.0' DATE OF SURVEY SCALE:: - MAY 20, 2004 1" = 20' FIELD BOOK PAGE NO. ORDER NO.: © COPYRIGHT 2004 O'BRIEN, SUITER & O'BRIEN, INC. D271 73 71-656d a-1-1-ac h mew' l 2 0 � � �Q� -S v`.r Yey ' M y AH-cc_hrneN-I-- 11 Kobr-E- Guru', ? 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I — j :4" STEEL 1SEAM N z : ,,j i F / FLASH UNDER EXIST, 1, J X I i I / WINDOWS Oeq•r0 NEW I i i o f SKYLIGt;7 PECIG Ii. �`� W l �� 41) �^ / Ll 2.-2xa w../ / I NEW 2K&Q14'0.6, 11, ExI�T, 2nt0eIG"ac. i ;j / q °� -(HIGK 5. •� - --- _.-_—---_ _ 1 , J .r t 1 ' -r15.451 NEW YOP OF EXISTING /11 OMNI FUTG i BF1+NI - ' �i 3/8"PLYWooD / ' i _ X W I Co x 4p STEEL 3E1VM Q 111111 14'-Ou I ' — �, r' �I OVER.WINDOW I 1�, ,) _ T— '�/a PLYwooD 6EYOND.Lisa , r •- - _ I kg 1 i �a4'4 BOLTS @ ..,„ 5 R / 2'-Co'O.c5G�4ER 1 Ii �_>I —. —1 �t MGIZxIo.Co i TOP¢F�o'f,• li i I t . / !• MI I , I' II i �> �i �- 5 z se II BATH [ 5ToRZACaE ; KIiGHENETTE. EN'(fL�(. • I i - (dJ' NEW STEEL U N Ij j l li �i // STAIR WITH II I —r i I_, I II N - �WooD READS d' K • N �, i I` I; � — / WRAPPED F I ':I l' Jr/' t,—^ �/ IN CARPET �) Z — __ L' I I F Y_ '. 2xlo @ I!o'/c FIXED GLASS V II ' li , I / ®f� rd,A� I �R::AlZR`( t II. 4uARRY Z TILEs_-e,, ' . IL /j TILE / 7 • 1. • ll ; , i11 Top opNli 1 f" II � I II ' ' > b FIRSTFLfl©R fl {�tl , li t —� _] �. l .—, z Ia? I' D I..IC, ERli-liS .- 3-2RIoiDERS(OJ ®®JI FV„ _ , _ ._____. _ _ __ _ O hi j NEW CoNG. cOL, �!N W cn Y3,3� ToPOFkXISTING GRADE Ali i EASE PILES 14 3I-w v,1 A+M Q PILE GAPS - i c STRUCTURAL I ',i - - I Z 0 w I `f' j ` -• ..d 1 - - N I N T y E>USTING - L rail ... - - _;� c� l' O 6ASE¢PILES 2o ta.SE $j PILES ::::::,:c7.43_,,,,.__ . - --I - _I ---. a I 1' - T I= - I :_ o a P VI ar 5 to°(TYF?Tr<) I� aPTt F1. P�~ r._. r 'z ' i .%' - - I Pam„ /i l �: i I I�' OAK NAND{Z4l ---�JC n j ® „,.E mciz-ine, • , It i1,q L,.STEEL PIPE- I 6 ®MG12#la Go j ^ EALusTER I ;fi i ¢ fia y,i p: (14.2%-z.42.1/2.A*. __/// I t CLEAR. FAX. iEC .gi —i 10 NN z i/ *ti}}v ALL AROU !i I O[ (Ni ANTI �- .WRAP CA ' iI li `/ izAE dN : —FA6H'TR EAD f? opEN (TYP),7 o��s �I I%z I.0 sTE:L PIPE 2 `J _I- + 1 I _ 6ALUSTER cs,c...EAR.INAh i _ t \ ai T ® o T Ar-) ®��Ai L 1 II-CAI' © �PCA® DGTAI L a'�I'-®i v RAILING DETAIL �1=1 Ivd1 ? lir F. RUDOLPH HOUSE TIMELINE i Delray Beach Esplanade subdivision Lot 21&West 35 feet of Lot 22(Unless noted otherwise) —a-' 212 Seabreeze Ave.,Delray Beach,FL 33483-7022 III' YEAR DATE EVENT CONSID- REFERENCE SELLER BUYER ERATION* PBC CTHSE -"I 1938 24 Jan Esplanade subdivision established,bounded by Intracoastal Waterway on the East,Vista Del Mar Drive on the North, Andrews Avenue on the East and Ocean Breeze Estates on the South.... OWNERS:Charlotte M.WELLENBRINK&husband H.W.WELLENBRINK& • Willard M.WATERS&wife Willie E.WATERS Plat bk 18,page 39 H 1941 18 Apr Charlotte M.WELLENBRINK George C.MARSTED $100.00 DEEDS BK 627,P389 a1945 20 Mar George C.MARSTED Stanley M.BABSON $100.00 DEEDS BK713,P546 W a 1952 22 Apr Florine E.GRIER,widow Marie R.Mc COLLON $10.00 DEEDS BK984,P69 11 Q A. E 30'Lot 19,all 20,all 21&W 35'Lot 22 'i U 01955 13 Apr Marie R.McCOLLOM,widow Sewell C.BIGGS,single $10.00 DEEDS BK1089,P463& • of Middletown,Delaware 1956 House built,2 stories,2938 total square feet with 2600 under air OFFICIAL RECORDS BK2129,P810& 1963 22 Nov Sewell C.BIGGS,single Richard McAVOY $10.00 OFFICIAL RECORDS of New Castle County,Delaware of New York City BK939,P379& d r 1971 1 Aug Alice C.McAVOY,executrix, Arno W.McGRAW& OFFICIAL RECORDS estate of Richard McAVOY wife,Helen C. $67.50 BK1921,P805& of Boca Raton,Florida r 1973 1 Mar Arno W.Mc GRAW&wife Helen C. Erskine H.COURTENAY Jr$53,000 price OFFICIAL RECORDS &wife,Virginia W. $159.00 BK2129,P810& of Goshen.Kentucky f • *CONSIDERATION:Usually contains amount of document stamps paid the county or sales price,where noted.Document stamp rates: Before 1957—$1/$1,000 of price. July 1, 1963--$3/$1,000.Oct. 1, 1979--$4/$1,000. r &Photocopied and attached Researcher: Richard F.Robinson Legacy Scribe,LLC,Boynton Beach,Florida W 561.742.2150 r 19 April 2005 d . • A C-1r,,nnery-{—" i`} — ►5 al..,aor, o C- -r\Nr-\.e.--- c06rn-Beat, C,ou ‘2,.eCtortIS II 11. 11 I] uI ul 1 11 R fl Attachment l ilij 1 J l' 1 JDelray Beach City Directory listings for 130 S. Vista Del Mar Dr. And 212 - II Seabreeze. I o f; 1953-1954- no listing (widow of John E. Biggs, Jr, Cary H., was living in GS) r A 1955-Biggs Sewell C. -no occupation listed- 130 S. Vista Del Mar Dr. • n • ( 1 1957-same listing a 1961-same address , r : u a 1963-street address changes to 212 Seabreeze ( Vista del Mar re-numbered) n Biggs listed rem to Delaware . u r 1966 listed with rem to Delaware r: r. r f 1970-no listing for S.C. Biggs (Frank E & Dorothy J.Biggs-- Listed in • Highland Beach) Richard McAvoy & Alice C. listed at 212 Seabreeze-- occupation given as lawyer (NY) 1973 212 Seabreeze is listed as vacant 1976- Courtenay, EH. & Virginia W., listed at 212 Seabreeze Ave. EH emp. Sterry Real Estate, Virginia- emp.. R.R. Robinson antiques 1979- Courtenay, Erskine H (Virginia W) assoc DeMarco & Sons Realty, Inc. 011 h 212 Seabreeze av Virginia Interiors, Virginia W. Courtenay p es 706 E. Atlantic av, etc. cii II 1n In I n t-- n n ii. I 1 i 11 n n n n n n n RIC CO. r FLORIDA POWER & LIGHT CO, °<<o � TELEVISION 0 '� CHAS. SENIOR, Mgr. t-- +g ATLANTIC AVE. 34 N. E. 1st Ave. PHONE CR 6-6026 . . ii CO.'S (4i n DELRAY BEACH DIRECTORY-1957 137 :' ' i p h n A j 1620 N Fed- Bezek Evelyn K Mrs clk 27 NE 1st av r 134 N Swinton av j , q John M r 134 N Swinton av p —Matthew L (Evelyn K) golf course maintman h 134 N t`i> 0 r motel S Ocean Swinton av 1 { `] Bick Elmer C (Inez R) carp h SW 7th av er Jr) hotel 30 S ' Bickel Ralph H (Mary G) tchr Trinity Lutheran Church h } a 826 SE 4th av ° • Big City Clothing Co (Jack Pollard) 5 NW 5th av -+ 1 N Federal hwyBiggs Carrie H wid John E Jr h N Ocean blvd (A1A hwy) o GS co tlantic av h SW —Sewell C h 130 S Vista Del Mar dr `T Bigham R B (Dorothy) h Melalenca rd and NY 0 fl \ av r 38 NE 19th I Bigley George A (The Fatio House) S Ocean blvd (AlA a o 3 W [olland Highway hwy) RD 1 h at Detroit Mich =3-a Bill's Auto Trim (William Hardwick) auto painting 29 NW 7 c & Loan Assn of 10th av a t Boynton Beach Billings Chester E (Ctherine G) policeman h 525 NE 15th ? 2 o --Orlo (Joan B) (Billings Seafood & Fruit Market) 1159 0 a h av E Atlantic av h 256 NE 16th 0- 15 I hlands Apts) S I �,r----Orlo J (Evelyn J) (Billings Seafood & Fruit Market) a 00 1159 E Atlantic av h 112 NE 1st av ja 3 Ellis h 318 NW —BILLINGS SEAFOOD& FRUIT MARKET (Orlo J and Orlo a Billings) 1159 E Atlantic av tel CR 6-4426—See p 60 g I'+' BILLINGSLEY OWEN T (Elsie N) general mgr Ocean City 7 is Lumber Co 22 N Railroad Way h at Ocean Ridge— a F. See top linesandp27 u elwkr r 316 SW Bimini Marlin Tuna Club Victor D Till pres (111) 620 E At- u lantic av - —Bird Norris W (Phyllis W) contr 701 SE 3d av h do i 7 6th av —Ralph (Barbara D) civil eng West Palm Beach h 325 NE 21st :ean blvd (A1A —Rowland D (Clara M) fishing camp Hillsbury Canal h 27 SE 5th av Ls Bishop David Jr (Georgia Lee) contsrwkr h 315 NW 1st N Ocean blvd —Fant F (Mattie L) far h 110 SE 2d '` --John F (Margaret M) carp emp Glenn Moore & Hertz �h��IIIIII�,� t1 hwy) Inc h 821 SE 2d av • —Katherine L h 134 Seaspray av and S Chatham NH I • Park S Fed- —Mary D wid Harper P h 234 NE 14th "} j • —Quentin M (Mary F) h 514 SE 5th av `• $I;j . 1 eral hwy RD 1 Bissett George (Anne C) h 414 S Ocean blvd (A1A hwy) �IIIIlillll► and Cleveland Ohio Bitner Leonard mgr 101 N Federal hwy r inq do 6 SPECIAL INFORMATION ON RESIDENCE (HLS R 744 43) ESTATE OF R ., n Et.s is ,:. tt N • Co�rt74u4` L1VT S= i- n_, T i ed h Ann Hrcrhfe d cat f-- rTcbb I S2 Featuring the Architect Paul Rudolph S rs c sits 6 x e A, Reference No. 1 111 Beach Post , January 26 , 1958, Mrs. Ella M. Burket. The first owner, "Sewell C. Biggs. . .augments a vision of what a home can be to those who view it and sense its meaning. Unusual in concept , in planning , in construction, it scores high in significant architectural achievement for Florida living. THE EXTERIOR has considerable repose with the sweeping horizontal lines. By elevation it dramatically triples lawn space. This upper level affords a handsome vantage point to view the semi-tropical landscaping and take every :! a advantage of sunshine. . . . .SOLID STEEL construction makes it ninety-eight per + cent more solid and tempered to subtropical living it has been said that artists see beauty further than others. Here is creature design bringing freedom, repose and creature comforts is achieved by a fascinating interior. This functional room for formal living has Japanese modern flavor THE a.. KITCHEN is another prideful feature. It is built for easy maintenance and making use of all available space ' or storage ONCE in a great while a house with this originality and consideration is built. It not only contrib- utes to the progressive locale, but to architectural accomplishment. " 6' Reference No. 2 O S "House & Home" June 1959. MERIT AWARD medium house class (600-2800 sq. ft. ) Architect: Paul Rudolph. Builder: James Sinks. Location: Delray Beach, Florida. CITATION: "This house (present Richard McAvoy house) reinstates a �. well-known form, but it does so with simplicity, elegance, discipline and good 0 proportions." Some jurors critized the relationship of the ground level to the z `- living level, . . , ,However, the jury agreed that a stilt house was a livable In solution in Florida. " Captions under photographs: "Storage walls like the v ! one at rear of dining area are used throughout the house to hold everything from clothes to the furnace." (� "Exterior sitting space is also outlined by the steel beams that support the () house. Landscaping is used to give patio privacy from street and neighbors. -1- Reference No. 3 Color pictures from magazine, no name: "Wellesley's Jewett Arts Center, designed by Architect Paul Rudolph, is $3,000,000 complex composed of visual-arts building, gallery and music and drama building "Yale's Greeley Forestry Lab, set on massive podium, is $600 ,000 research pa- vilion called "the concrete orchard" because of its rows of expressive, precast columns "BRIGHT NEW ARRIVAL" Reference No 4, Time, February 1 , 1960: for architectural stargazers, the most exciting new arrival is crew-cut Paul Rudolph, 41 , who two years ago was appointed chairman of Yale' s Department of Architecture. A prizewinner from the age of 22 , Rudolph has already collected such awards as Sao Paulo's Outstanding Young Architects Award (1954) and the Brunnar Memorial Prize of the National Institute of Arts and Letters Rudolph first made his mark by designing houses, mostly in Florida" Rudolph got his training at Harvard from one of the fathers of modern architecture, Bauhaus Founder Walter Gropius growing success has almost swamped Rudolph with commissions. . . . .he considers the real essence of architecture, "this serious and beautiful game of space " I r, . 1 /' Delray Beach Historical Society • presents r. ire r f7 u b EJ ''�, (I3I v - - := .worm..,,. tiA 1 art 1 sit ,__=.r__=... li r . d1, ARCFIITECTURF { CASON COTTAGE MUSEUM Five Northeast First Street Delray Beach, Florida September 9, 1989 - November 15, 1989 I . ; iL I I 1 FJ U El a li Fl 1 "A�L_ L�KUOL--- W HO �C I eo �TH -Lozl -i i 0 0 1E.1\17IA ION 10{ COL \ il --EAT • VENTI LATI OIL. i 1 ,, I F,. 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