|
ELIAS-RODRIGUEZ HOUSE

927 E. EIGHTH
STREET
HP #2
| Survey Number: |
HPS-205 |
| Year Built: |
c. 1885 |
| Architectural Style: |
Sonoran /
Vernacular Adobe |
THEME / CONTEXT
This building is associated with the context of Community
Planning and Development. It falls under the theme of housing -
custom house.
HISTORIC ASSOCIATION
The original one-room portion of this 4-room house was built in
the Sonoran style. The original flat roof of dirt over vigas was
covered with the present steeply pitched hipped roof in 1912.
Other modifications to the house include replacement of windows,
the addition of a front porch, and replacement of wood floor
with concrete. Despite these changes, the integrity of the house
is high and the house is worthy of preservation as one of the
oldest remaining adobe houses in Tempe. On-going rehab of the
property continues by the City of Tempe.
ARCHITECTURAL ASSOCIATION
The Elias-Rodriguez House is a single-story
adobe building with a steeply pitched, hipped roof which was added over the
original flat dirt-over-vigas roof in 1912. The hipped-roof front porch was
added at the same time. Later modifications include replacement of all windows
with large, multi-paned steel casement windows and a bay window in the east
facade. The house is covered with stucco and patched with concrete. The roof is
covered with rolled roofing. By the 1980s, portions of the original porch roof
were exposed and rotting. The east and west facades each now have two large
windows. The front entry is offset to the east. Original interior wood floors
have been replaced with concrete. Interior walls are of adobe and are in good
condition. An addition is at the rear of the house.
SUMMARY
The Elias-Rodriguez House, built about 1882, is
noteworthy as one of the earliest remaining houses to be built in the area along
East 8th Street, later platted as the Sotelo Addition in 1890. Although Vincent
Elias is not recorded in the assessor’s rolls until 1891, the family asserts the
house was built in 1882 or 1883. Elias, a farm laborer from Tucson, built the
house one room at a time for his family. In 1927, his daughter, Irene, married
Ray B. Rodriguez and they moved into the house; in the early 1980s, Mrs.
Rodriguez still occupied the house. Interior
stencilling was done by an itinerant artist who did the work in exchange for
room and board.
Despite some physical changes, the house retained much of its architectural
integrity over the years. The house has been purchased by the City of Tempe, and
it is now being rehabilitated. It is worthy of preservation as one of the oldest
remaining adobe houses in Tempe. The building will eventually house a museum of
local Mexican American history.
More information on this building is available at the Tempe Historical Museum
Research Library. See the
File Contents for
HPS-205.
SOURCES|
Interview: Irene Rodriguez 10/15/81, 2/16/83; Tempe City Directories 1892 -
1932; Maricopa County Assessor's Records; Historic Building Assessment by Ryden
Architects, 1994;
http://www.hgtv.com/library/RAM/az_tempe.html
Awards
for the Elias-Rodriguez House
|