504 N Roxboro

35.997279, -78.8952

504
Durham
NC
Year built
1910-1920
Year demolished
2006
Construction type
Neighborhood
Use
Building Type
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Owner: James Marvin Bradford
Built: circa 1910


Timing is everything. Unfortunately, my timing failed this test - I had intended to shoot pictures of these houses last weekend.



I apologize for the poor quality of this picture - but you never know how quickly or slowly the Durham Demolition... uh, Department of Housing and Community development will move. So it could be gone by this afternoon, or be around next year.

Here is a partial "before" shot, courtesy of my friend eb:



These two houses represent two of the last three houses in the 500 block of North Roxboro St.
They were once quite beautiful, and had begun to fade by the 1970s, when much around them had been demolished by urban renewal.


Looking east-southeast, 1970s.


Looking east-southeast, 1970s.

It's hard to see the elaborate stained-glass surrounds around the windows on 502 - which were in place until ~ 3 years ago. These had been stripped, and the windows replaced with vinyl. The houses had been vacant for several years, and, without intervention, a bad outcome was inevitable. I thought it would simply be torn down.

The Raleigh News and Observer states that the fire has been deemed suspicious by the fire department.

It has been obvious that these two houses, surrounded by vacant land from urban renewal and church parking needs, were going to go. Have city or county government, economic development groups, or local non-profits done anything to 'encourage' the owner towards repair or sale of these houses? Not that I'm aware of.

Although 504 N. Roxboro did not burn, I include it here because I am sure that's its time is short, and I wouldn't be surprised if it is demolished along with 502.



Some more pictures of the house and area:













Here you can see the quantity of vacant/poorly used land surrounding these properties. Most of the land in this picture is an entire block (save one house) of surface parking for the First Baptist Church (all formerly housing). This is Exhibit A in my claim that faith communities are a repeat winner on my Top 5 Threats to Preservation list. This was once a continguous neighborhood with the houses in the distance, which are part of the Cleveland-Holloway Historic District (and themselves threatened by neglect). It was also once a contiguous neighborhood with Dillard Street, profiled in an earlier post.

Update 4/07:
Both of these properties, the burned and the unburned, were demolished in late 2006. It is now a trash-filled vacant lot.

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