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HomeMy WebLinkAbout06/14/2017 - Landmark Preservation Commission - Supplemental Documents - Work Session` I. IDENTIFICATION 1. Resource number: 5LR.14198 2. Temporary resource number: N/A 3. County: Larimer 4. City: Fort Collins 5. Historic building name: Fischer House 6. Current building name: Fischer House 7. Building address: 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins, Colorado 80521 8. Owner name and address: Gene Fischer P.O. Box 506 Fort Collins, CO 80522 II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION 9. P.M. 6th Township 7N Range 69W SE ¼ of NE ¼ of SE ¼ of section 15 10. UTM reference Zone 13; 491755 mE ; 4491209 mN 11. USGS quad name: Fort Collins, CO Year: 1960; Photorevised 1984 Map scale: X 7.5' 15' 12. Lot(s): Lot 15 Block: Not applicable Plat: Western Heights (First Western Heights Annexation, platted December 27, 1956) Year Platted: 1956 Parcel Number: 97154-06-015 13. Boundary Description and Justification: The site boundary corresponds to the recorded legal description/parcel limits of Larimer County Parcel No. 97154-06-015, which corresponds to Lot 15 of the First Western Heights Annexation to the City of Fort Collins as platted in 1956. The 14,791 ft² (0.34 acre) parcel contains a single-family dwelling and attached garage at 1201 Westward Drive as well as surrounding yards and landscaping. The site boundary encompasses the area associated with its historic residential use. III. ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION 14. Building plan (footprint, shape): Irregular 15. Dimensions in feet: Length: Undetermined x Width: Undetermined 16. Number of stories: 1.0 17. Primary external wall material(s): Wood-wide clapboard; fieldstone masonry veneer 18. Roof configuration: Gable-Side Gables Official eligibility determination (OAHP use only) Date ____________ Initials ________________ ______ Determined Eligible- NR ______ Determined Not Eligible- NR ______ Determined Eligible- SR ______ Determined Not Eligible- SR ______ Need Data ______ Contributes to eligible NR District ______ Noncontributing to eligible NR District OAHP1403 Rev. 9/98 COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY Architectural Inventory Form Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 19. Primary external roof material: Composition or asphalt shingles 20. Special features: Porch, chimney, garage 21. General architectural description: This property consists of a large (2,528 ft²) single- story, single family dwelling of wood frame construction. The residence rests on a poured concrete foundation. The house has an irregular plan. The main mass of the house is side- gabled, with a projecting, front-gabled west wing. A narrower gabled wing extends southward from the west end of the rear/south side of the house. Its roof is clad with asphalt or composition shingles that are probably non-original replacements. A massive fieldstone chimney rises from the roof near the west end of the building. The majority of the home’s exterior is clad with wide clapboard siding, painted dark brown. It is an unadorned example of a variant of Ranch-style domestic architecture. The façade is distinguished by random pattern fieldstone masonry applied to the front end of the projecting front-gabled wing. This front-gabled portion of the façade contains a large, three- part wood sash window with a large fixed central pane flanked by smaller double-hung windows. The large window has a sill composed of thin projecting pieces of fieldstone. To the left of the projecting front-gabled wing is the main entry in a recessed alcove that is equipped with a modern wood door and storm door. The remainder of the façade to the left of the main entry is fenestrated with two tandem, wood frame windows with swing-out sashes. The attached two car garage appears to be an original feature of the house, and located at the east end of the house. The garage is sealed with an unglazed, painted particle board panel roll- up door. The rear/south side of the garage wing contains a tandem set of stained wooden doors sealing a large opening, and a similar solitary personnel entry door. Another distinguishing characteristic of this post-World War II Ranch-style dwelling is large open rear porch with a concrete deck, which is protected by the overhanging roof, which is supported by a series of 4 x 4” wooden posts. Within the porch are entries providing access to the rear of the house; these include a large sliding glass door, to the right of which is a solitary personnel door. 22. Architectural style/building type (duplex): Ranch-style 23. Landscaping or special setting features: This house is situated on an irregularly-shaped parcel that is bounded on the east by 1185 Westward Drive (parcel with metes and bounds), on the west by Lot 17 (1205 Westward Drive), on the south by a large parcel with an address of 1215 S Shields Street, and on the north by Westward Drive. The parcel for 1201 Westward Drive (Parcel No. 97154-06-015) consists of one entire platted lot (Lot 15); the irregularly-shaped parcel encompasses 14,791 ft² (0.34 acre) of land. A concrete-paved driveway with numerous cracks extends north from the attached garage to Westward Drive. A narrow (2.5 feet-wide) sidewalk typical of many post-World War II subdivisions extends along the front of the property, parallel to Westward Drive. Where the property is located, Westward Drive dips southward before straightening out to the east (towards Shields Street). The house is surrounded by well- manicured landscaping, including a grass lawn on the front, east side, and rear of the house. The back yard is enclosed by a very modern, light brown-colored cast concrete block masonry wall, equipped with steel barred gates. In addition to grass, the parcel is landscaped with several mature trees and shrubs. In the front yard are a very large Russian live tree, a moderate- sized pine tree, and a couple of very large juniper shrubs planted close to the projecting-front- Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins gabled west wing. Additionally, a small flower garden is established near the façade near where the main entry is located. The property is situated within the historic Western Heights Annexation of Fort Collins, which is a largely intact early post-World War II residential development located west of, and accessible from, Shields Street, a major east-west thoroughfare in the City. Westward Avenue is lined on both sides by mainly one-story, Ranch-style houses, each with a different design, suggesting that each house is architect-designed rather than examples of “spec” houses following one or more designs. These homes are generally wood frame structures with either horizontal wood siding and/or brick or stone veneer. The fieldstone veneer on a portion of the façade of 1201 Westward Drive is atypical for the neighborhood. Most of the homes in Western Heights appear to have gable rather than hip roofs. The neighborhood, which still retains quite a number of unmodified houses, presents a relatively uniform appearance and contributes visually and culturally to a neighborhood identity. 24. Associated buildings, features, or objects: None IV. ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY 25. Date of Construction: Estimate: Actual: 1957 Source(s) of information: Current Larimer County Assessor’s online property record for Parcel 97154-06-015; architectural characteristics 26. Architect: Unknown Source(s) of information: No information found 27. Builder/Contractor: Unknown Source(s) of information: No information found 28. Original owner: Melvin C. and Betty Ralston Source(s) of information: 1957 Fort Collins City directory 29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions): This single-family dwelling was constructed in 1957, immediately after the platting of the First Western Heights Annexation to the City of Fort Collins. According to Erik Fischer, son of owner Gene Fischer, the house was remodeled at least 3 times. The rear of the house was expanded sometime prior to the 1990s, when the whole front end and kitchen area was expanded north by about 12 feet. Many of the windows and doors on the house are modern. 30. Original location ___X____ Moved _______ Date of move(s): N/A V. HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS 31. Original use(s): Residential – Single Family Dwelling 32. Intermediate use(s): None 33. Current use(s): Residential – Single Family Dwelling 34. Site type(s): House 35. Historical background: Built in 1957, this rambling one-story Ranch-style home is located within the First Western Heights Annexation to Fort Collins, which encompassed approximately 8 acres of land on the west side of Shields Street and just west of the Colorado State University campus. The First Western Heights Annexation was officially platted on December 27, 1956 (see attached Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins plat). A plat for the Second Western Heights Annexation to Fort Collins was filed approximately two months later, on February 7, 1957. Together, these two areas comprise what is now known simply as “Western Heights.” The temporal pattern of development along Westward Drive in the First Western Heights Annexation area is shown in the table below. Westward Drive is the primary roadway in the First Annexation area. As the data show, immediately after the First Annexation area was platted, a big flurry of construction followed, and in 1956 and 1957 a total of 18 homes were built along Westward Drive – nearly 70% of the total number of homes in the fully built-out subdivision. Another, smaller flurry of construction activity occurred between 1959-1961, when another 7 homes were constructed along Westward Drive. All of these homes were/are examples of Ranch-style domestic architecture from the mid-1950s. Residences built along Westward Drive in the First Western Heights Annexation to Fort Collins Year Number of homes built Number subsequently remodeled 1956 4 1957 14 4 1959 3 1 1960 3 1961 1 1979 1 TOTAL 26 5 (19% of total) The house at 1201 Westward Drive was among the 14 homes erected in the year 1957, soon after the official platting of Western Heights. Its original owners and occupants were Melvin C. Ralston and his wife Betty. Mr. Ralston was then employed as the manager of the Goodyear Service Store located at 221 East Mountain Avenue in Fort Collins. The Goodyear store offered “automobile and home supplies, tires, gas & electric appliances, [and] TV,” the latter merchandise indicative of the new rage sweeping America – the technological wonder known as household televisions. The Ralstons occupied the home from 1957 to c. 1959 or 1960. By 1960, the Ralstons had evidently moved to a new home at 1212 Springfield Drive in Fort Collins, and in that year Melvin Ralston worked as a salesman for the Pat Griffin Company at 701 North College Avenue. The Pat Griffin Company offered oil, wholesale tires, and tire retreading.” In 1960, the Fort Collins City Directory indicated that the new owner of 1201 Westward Drive was attorney and Deputy District Attorney Gene E. Fischer and his wife Marylynne. The Fischers have lived at this address since 1957 – a 60-year period. Gene and Marylynne Fischer had four children: Lynne, born in 1959; Erik, born in 1961; Karen, born in 1963; and Chris, born in 1967. Gene was an attorney in private practice, and by 1966 he had entered into a partnership with fellow attorney Elery Wilmarth. Until sometime in the late 1960s, Gene Fischer also served as District Attorney for the 8th Judicial District. By 1973, Fischer’s law partnership was expanded by the addition of a new partner: Timothy W. Hasler. The firm’s office was located at 900 Savings Building in Fort Collins, but by 1979 it had Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins moved to new offices at 300 West Oak Street. Then, by 1983 Fischer & Walmarth had relocated to 125 South Howes Street, two blocks west of College Avenue. By 1986, Fischer’s firm had two new partners: Stephen E. Howard and Steven G. Francis. Marylynn Fischer passed away, but Gene Fischer still (2017) occupies the house and is nearly 90 years old at this time. Also living in the Westward Drive home is his daughter and eldest child, Lynne. Western Heights is a classic 1950s/post-World War II subdivision, with a street plan including some curving roads as opposed to a pure perpendicular compass oriented grid such as Fort Collins pre-World War II grid pattern of intersecting, perpendicular north-south and east-west oriented streets. All of the homes built represented different examples of post-World II single- story Ranch-style homes with moderate to low-pitched roofs, massive chimneys, and lack or stylistic ornamentation. Western Heights was one of many generally similar “middle class” residential subdivisions created throughout the United States as population growth and postwar prosperity created a widespread building boom all across the nation. An application in 2016 for a demolition permit from the City of Fort Collins triggered the need for this documentation and evaluation of this historic home. Because it is more than 50 years old, the City of Fort Collins Historic Preservation Department required this documentation to be completed in order to assess the property’s historical and architectural significance, and, should it be razed, to serve as a detailed historical and architectural record of the property. In February of 2017, historic preservation consulting company Retrospect was hired by owner’s representative Erik Fischer to research and document the property onto this Colorado Architectural Inventory Form. 36. Sources of information: Beier, Harold 1958 Fort Collins, History and General Character. Research and Survey Report, Part 1. Prepared by Harold Beier, Community Development Consultant, Fort Collins, Colorado, for the City of Fort Collins Planning and Zoning Board, April 1958. Fort Collins City Directories, for the years 1956-1957, 1960-1964, 1966, 1968-1973, 1975-1976, 1979, 1981, and 1983-2016. From the collection of the Fort Collins Local History Archive. Larimer County Assessor 2107 Property information record for 1201 Westward Drive (Parcel No. 97154-06-015). Accessed online, January 7, 2017. Simmons, Thomas, and Laurie Simmons. 1992 City of Fort Collins Central Business District Development and Residential Architecture Historic Contexts. Report prepared by Front Range Research Associates for the City of Fort Collins Advance Planning Department. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins VI. SIGNIFICANCE 37. Local landmark designation: Yes ____ No __X__ Date of designation: Not Applicable Designating authority: Not Applicable 38. Applicable National Register Criteria: ___ __ A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history; ______ B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past; ______ C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or ______ D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory. ________ Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual) ___X ___ Does not meet any of the above National Register criteria 39. Area(s) of significance: Not Applicable 40. Period of significance: Not Applicable 41. Level of significance: National _____ State _____ Local _____ Not Applicable 42(a). Statement of significance National Register of Historic Places-eligibility: The house at 1201 Westward Drive does not embody sufficient historical or architectural significance to qualify as individually eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). This residential property is associated with a significant historical trend, i.e. the nationwide post-World War II building boom and the development of new residential subdivisions featuring “modern” Ranch-style domestic architecture. This significance applies to the entire subdivision, and the residence at 1201 Westward Drive would not individually qualify as NRHP-eligible under Criterion A, although it would likely be a contributing element of a NRHP-eligible postwar subdivision in Fort Collins. Archival evidence indicates that this dwelling was not owned, occupied, or otherwise associated with any persons who would be considered significant in terms of Fort Collins, Colorado, or national history. Consequently, the property would not qualify for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) under Criterion B. This house is an altered variant of single story brick post-World War II Ranch-style residential architecture in Fort Collins. Its design includes some attributes common to mid-1950s Ranch style homes, such as its single story configuration, attached two-car garage, and massive fieldstone interior chimney. However, it lacks other common features of the type such as a large picture window. According to the owner’s family, the house has been substantially remodeled. The residence is not a distinctive or especially representative example of post-World War II Ranch-style domestic architecture, and, therefore, it does not qualify as eligible for the NRHP under Criterion C. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 42(b). Statement of significance Fort Collins Local Landmark-eligibility: This residential property is associated with a significant historical trend, i.e. the nationwide post-World War II building boom and the development of new planned residential subdivisions featuring “modern” Ranch-style domestic architecture. This significance would apply to the entire subdivision as well as potentially to individual dwellings within the Western Heights neighborhood. However, it is one of at least several similar age residential subdivisions in Fort Collins, and Western Heights does not exhibit any distinctive or significant attributes that would render the subdivision and home at 1201 Westward Drive good representative examples of this significant historical trend. Consequently, the property at 1201 Westward Drive does not qualify as individually eligible for Local Landmark designation under Criterion A. Archival evidence enabled the identification of all owners and occupants of 1201 Westward Drive, and indicated that it is not associated with any persons who would be considered significant in terms of Fort Collins, Colorado, or national history. Consequently, the property would not qualify for Local Landmark designation under Criterion B. This house is a substantially altered variant of single story brick post-World War II Ranch-style residential architecture in Fort Collins. Its design includes some attributes common to mid- 1950s Ranch style homes, such as its single story configuration, attached two-car garage, and massive fieldstone interior chimney. However, it lacks other common features of the type such as a large picture window. According to the owner’s family, the house has been substantially remodeled. The residence is not a distinctive or especially representative example of post- World War II Ranch-style domestic architecture, and, therefore, it does not qualify as eligible for Local Landmark designation under Criterion C. 43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance: To qualify as a Local Landmark, a property must meet the minimum age threshold (50 years), must embody significance per the NRHP and Local Landmark eligibility criteria, and must also retain sufficient integrity to convey significance. The exterior design of this historic dwelling has been substantially altered by at least three major remodeling projects. While the home retains integrity of location, setting, feeling and association, it lacks integrity of design, materials, and workmanship, and therefore does not qualify as eligible for individual Local Landmark eligibility, nor would it be a contributing element of a historic residential district, should one be identified. VII. NATIONAL REGISTER ELIGIBILITY ASSESSMENT 44. National Register (individual) eligibility field assessment: Eligible Not (Individually) Eligible X Need Data 45. Is there National Register district potential? Yes _ No X Discuss: If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing _ Noncontributing _ Not Applicable X _ 46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing _ Not Applicable X _ VIII. CITY OF FORT COLLINS LOCAL LANDMARK ELIGIBILITY ASSESSMENT Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 47. Local Landmark (individual) eligibility field assessment: Individually Eligible Not Individually Eligible X Need Data IX. RECORDING INFORMATION 48. Photograph numbers: 5LR.14198- #1-44 Negatives or digital photo files filed at: City of Fort Collins, Development Review Center (Current Planning) - Historic Preservation Department, 281 N. College Avenue, Fort Collins, CO 80524 49. Report title: Historic and Architectural Assessment for 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 50. Date(s): June 11, 2017 51. Recorder(s): Jason Marmor 52. Organization: RETROSPECT 53. Address: 936 Wild Cherry Lane, Fort Collins, CO 80521 54. Phone number(s): (970) 219-9155 History Colorado - Office of Archaeology & Historic Preservation 1200 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395 Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins Location of 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins (5LR.14198), shown on a portion of the U.S. Geological Survey 7.5’ Fort Collins, Colorado topographic quadrangle map (1960; Photorevised 1984). ▪ 1201 Westward Drive 5LR.14198 Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), shown on modern aerial imagery from GoogleEarth™. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins Sketch map of 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins (5LR.14198). Attached garage Open rear porch Modern concrete block wall Westward Drive Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1956 Plat of First Western Heights Annexation (part of Western Heights Subdivision), from the Larimer County Clerk & Recorder’s Office in Fort Collins. Arrow shows location of lot containing 1201 Westward Drive. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1957 Plat of Second Western Heights Annexation (part of Western Heights Subdivision), from the Larimer County Clerk & Recorder’s Office. Arrow shows location of Lot 15 containing 1201 Westward Drive. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), looking southwest. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), closer view, looking southwest. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), looking south. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), showing path to front entry, looking southwest. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), walkway to main entry, looking southwest. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), looking yard lamp with address number in front yard. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), façade looking west. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), projecting west wing, looking west. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up view of main entry on façade. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of modern stained glass window on side of west wing. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), portion of façade with attached garage, looking south. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), garage door on façade/north elevation, looking southeast. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), windows on façade, looking south. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), front of west wing, looking south. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of attic vent on front gabled portion of facade. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), front gabled portion of façade, looking southeast. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of three part window on façade, looking southeast. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), fieldstone windowsill on front of west wing. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of fieldstone veneer on front of west wing. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), west elevation showing overhang of fieldstone veneer covering portion of facade. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), east elevation, looking south-southwest. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), east elevation, looking west. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), east elevation, looking west-northwest. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), air conditioner(s) adjacent to east elevation. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), rear/south end of attached garage, looking north. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), rear view, looking west. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), rear view, looking northwest. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), rear porch, looking north. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), entry on rear/south elevation looking north. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), rear/south elevation, looking northeast. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), gabled rear wing, looking northeast. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), west side yard, looking north. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of boxed soffit on gabled rear wing. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), portion of west elevation, looking northeast. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of massive fieldstone interior chimney. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), close-up of solitary window on west elevation. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), driveway, looking north. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), eastern portion of front yard, looking south-southeast. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), large shrubs obscuring portion of façade, looking south. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), mature Russian olive tree in front yard, looking northeast. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), pine tree near northwest corner of house, looking southwest. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), back yard, looking south-southwest. 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), modern concrete block wall enclosing backyard, looking SSW. Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Architectural Inventory Form 5LR.14198 – 1201 Westward Drive, Fort Collins 1201 Westward Drive (5LR.14198), southwest portion of back yard, looking southwest.