234 Pine Street



Three-storey, red-brick, Queen Anne Revival house, with balanced façade under panelled and shingled gable (c. 1910), with later, south vestibule, and with wooden, south, bay window.

Ground Floor – Large, square, lower-sash windows at either side have rock-faced stone sills and leaded-light, transom windows (behind three-pane, storms) within elliptical-arch apertures. Brick hoodmoulds are built off upper course of double peripheral stringcourses. RH window is in rectangular, one-storey, brick bay projecting some 12” beyond façade. Bay has small, hipped, asphalt-shingled roof over small wooden fascia, and no gutters. To south side, later, one-storey vestibule clad in painted Angelstone, has elliptical-arch masonry (built into horizontal courses) with blind fanlight and four-pane side-lights flanking slab door.

Second Floor – At LH side, above vestibule, is old multi-pane wooden door (behind metal storm) with segmental, brick arch above. At main façade, windows are single 1/1 to left, and to right, a pair of narrower, 1/1 windows over projecting brick bay (all with metal storms). Slightly peaked fascia above is finished with broad, horizontal boards, with fine dentils above.

Gable - Pair of sash-and-case windows is centred within gable, each with large, lozenge-shaped central pane in upper sash (behind metal storms). Adjacent wall surfaces are divided into tall, plastered, vertical panels with smaller, residual panels below (decorative shingles may exist under panels). Dentilled cornice over windows extends to eaves, with pointed shingles cladding gable above, and panelled gable fascia has deep, ogee shingle-moulding.

Roof – Clad in light grey, asphalt shingles. Tall chimney at north side has remaining double corbelled course, and several courses of plain, rebuilt masonry above.