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Item 09 - Fairview Street Improvement Project
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Item 09 - Fairview Street Improvement Project
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State of California—The Resources Agency Primary# <br /> DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI# <br /> CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial <br /> Page 5 of 11 *Resource Name or#2501 Huckleberry Road <br /> *Recorded by: Andrew Bursan *Date: December 9, 2024 ❑x Continuation ❑ Update <br /> Residential subdivisions in communities outside of the historic core expanded significantly during the 1910s and <br /> 1920s, including the construction of small-to medium-sized craftsman bungalows and Colonial Revival style houses. <br /> More than half of the Pico-Lowell district to the southwest of downtown had been subdivided into residential parcels <br /> by 1912. The 1910s also saw an expansion in manufacturing and industry, indicating Santa Ana's economic strength <br /> (Marsh 1994). <br /> Santa Ana had created a solid economy centered on agriculture, manufacturing, and retail by the 1920s. This <br /> corresponded with Orange County's dramatic population expansion,with much of that increase concentrating in <br /> Santa Ana as it tried to acquire most of the region to the west of Orange County; as a result, Santa Ana became <br /> Orange County's commercial hub. Santa Ana increased from 16,000 people in 1920 to 30,000 people by 1929, due in <br /> part to the construction of interurban rail networks and the popularity of automobiles in the 1920s.Through the 1930s, <br /> Santa Ana's downtown business core witnessed success and expansion as many of its brick structures along Fourth <br /> Street were renovated with classical and contemporary elements(Marsh 1994). <br /> Most growth in the early 1940s and throughout World War II featured four area military bases, including the Santa <br /> Ana Army Air Base and the West Coast Air Corps Training Center, both of which were constructed to help the war <br /> effort. The Santa Ana Army Air Base operated as a basic training camp with no airplanes, hangars, or runways,while <br /> the training facility on 8th Street in downtown served airmen throughout the war(City of Santa Ana 2020). <br /> Following World War ll, Santa Ana experienced the increased suburbanization typical of Orange County at the time, <br /> as servicemen returned from the war and demand for homes in southern California increased, launching an <br /> unprecedented period of growth and industrial expansion that would significantly alter the once-expansive <br /> agricultural, open ranch landscape. Santa Ana's population of 31,921 people in 1940 increased to 45,533 by 1950. <br /> This inflow of new inhabitants and immigrants would last for the next 40 years(Marsh 1994). <br /> The postwar housing boom accelerated change in the character of neighborhoods during the 1950s and 1960s, as <br /> demolition and new construction increased in neighborhoods such as the Santa Ana Triangle neighborhood to the <br /> northeast of the City Center and the Riverview West neighborhood to the northwest of the City Center. The 1950s <br /> were particularly notable for the expansion of the car industry following the end of wartime gasoline rationing. The <br /> Fashion Square Mall was built in 1959 close to the Bullock's Department Store to the north of downtown, and <br /> changing social and economic trends contributed to the suburbanization of retail districts. Santa Ana's population was <br /> 156,359 in 1950 and had increased to 203,714 by 1980.This flood of new people was caused in part by altering <br /> postwar immigration regulations, especially those that engendered the influx of Vietnamese refugees after the <br /> Vietnam War ended in 1975(City of Santa Ana 2020). <br /> Downtown commercial deterioration was prevalent from the early 1960s until the late 1970s. This sparked a historic <br /> preservation movement whose proponents aimed to preserve the historic integrity of structures or promote change <br /> through reversible improvements. During the 1960s and 1980s, some historic properties in the French Park and <br /> Heninger Park neighborhoods were demolished and replaced with high-density multi-family properties, coinciding <br /> with the 1970s effort to establish the French Park neighborhood as the Santa Ana's first local historic district in 1984 <br /> and the Heninger Park neighborhood as the second in 1986 through the creation of Specific Development zoning <br /> districts.The Downtown Santa Ana Historic District was added to the National Register in 1984, and the French Park <br /> Historic District was added in 1999. In 1998, the Santa Ana City Council passed the Historic Preservation Ordinance, <br /> Chapter 30 of the Santa Ana Municipal Code, which established the City's local inventory of historical resources, the <br /> Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties, and the Historic Resources Commission to oversee the City of Satna <br /> Ana's Historic Preservation Program (City of Santa Ana 2020). <br /> Minimal Traditional (c. 1935-1950) <br /> The subject property is an example of the Minimal Traditional style,which was a nationally prevalent style that <br /> emerged during the Great Depression. Minimal Traditional homes were designed to be simplistic, economical, and <br /> able to be produced at a mass scale.The prevalence of the style was the result of federal policies. Franklin D. <br /> Roosevelt enacted the National Housing Act in 1934, creating the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). The <br /> Minimal Traditional-style house was explicitly preferred in FHA guidelines for homeowners to secure FHA-insured <br /> DPR 523L(1/95) *Required information <br /> 9-161 <br />
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