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		<title>Anatomy of a Baltimore Rowhome</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/homegarden/baltimore-rowhome-architectural-history/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lydia Woolever]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Jun 2025 21:32:24 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Home & Living]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore architectural history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore rowhomes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[brick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Commission for Historic and Architectural Preservation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dollar homes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[formstone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[glass rock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marble steps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painted screens]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rowhomes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stained glass]]></category>
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<p style="font-size:1.25rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0.25em; ">By Lydia Woolever</p>
<p class="uppers" style="font-size:1rem; margin-bottom:0.5em;">Photography by Christopher Myers</p>
<p style="font-size:1rem;"><i>Illustration by Valerie Chiang</i></p>


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<p>
<b>THERE ARE A FEW MOMENTS</b> when you really see it. You
come over a hill on O’Donnell Street on the eastern edge
of the city. You pass down a stretch of Pratt from the far
west side of town. Perhaps you’re heading south, along
St. Paul. Or coming up north, from the bridge on Hanover.
Often enough, you almost miss it, just an ordinary sight
while getting to where you need to go. But other times,
at just the right moment, it strikes you—something like
awe. Out ahead, Baltimore unfurls across its undulating
corridors. And for block after block after block, mile after
mile, all the way to the horizon or heart of downtown, it’s
nothing but one thing: rowhomes.
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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>Survey drawings of North
Collington Avenue in Eager Park. <i>—LIBRARY OF CONGRESS</i></center></h5>
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<p>
“The rowhouse is the basic building block of Baltimore,”
says Eric Holcomb, executive director at the city’s
Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation,
aka <a href="https://chap.baltimorecity.gov/about-chap">CHAP</a>. “It is the architectural form that ties all
of this together . . . giving it its context and its character.”
</p>

<p>
Holcomb is pointing to a city map, hung on the wall
of his office, located in a drab skyscraper across from City
Hall. A carpenter turned career preservationist, his eyes
light up when asked about rowhomes—the vernacular
architecture that dominates the local housing stock,
loosely defined as a series of residential structures that
share side walls, often built in one fell swoop.</p>
<p>It’s not
quite a duplex, or a townhome, or a condominium. Instead, the
rowhouse turns out to be its own diverse, dynamic, egalitarian vessel,
one that has emerged in nearly every neighborhood and evolved for
more than two centuries alongside Baltimore, arguably becoming its
most defining feature (despite at times being derided as monotonous
and mundane).</p>
<p>In other words, it’s an underdog. And while other
American cities have built them, too—Boston, Philadelphia, New
York, D.C., on down to Richmond—where else do these rows remain
so deeply entrenched in the local sense of identity?
</p>
<p>
In Baltimore, “the rowhouse has demonstrated that this very basic
rectangular box can be made anew over and over and over again,”
says Holcomb, his filing cabinet stuck with a fading “Stop the Road”
sticker, from when a scrappy group of citizens saved swaths of them
from I-95’s path in the early 1970s. “And that’s the exciting piece—it’s
still evolving. While we’re not building block after block like we used
to, new rowhouses are still being built, every day.”
</p>

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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>AN UNKNOWN STRETCH OF ROWHOMES WITH WOODEN STEPS, CIRCA 1938 <i>—Courtesy of the Library of Congress</i></center></h5>
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<p>
<strong>TODAY, IT’S SAFE</strong> to say that there are thousands upon thousands of
rowhomes in Baltimore, with half of the city’s 251,000 occupied
housing units categorized as attached single-family dwellings. No one
knows who built the first one, but around the time we incorporated
in 1796, they started to crop up around the harbor’s edge. “The very
location of the various styles of rowhouses speaks directly to patterns
of city growth,” rippling out in concentric circles, write scholars Mary
Ellen Hayward and Charles Belfoure in <i><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/439850.The_Baltimore_Rowhouse">The Baltimore Rowhouse</a></i>.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>A marble-stepped postcard. <i>Courtesy of the Baltimore City Archives</i>.</center></h5>
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<p>
First, they arrived in Fells Point, then Federal Hill—often two stories
high, two rooms deep, with a gabled roof and dormer windows,
made of wood and brick in the classic Federal style then fashionable in
England. An economy of scale, it was faster and more cost-effective
to build several at once. And a “ground rent” system also made it
beneficial for the buyer, who saved money by purchasing the home
but only leasing the land.</p>
<p>Before long, demand exploded, thanks
to our bustling port, an influx of immigrants, and the burgeoning
B&O Railroad. “We were bursting at the seams,” says Johns Hopkins,
executive director of <a href="https://baltimoreheritage.org/">Baltimore Heritage</a>. “If you needed to build
quickly, rowhouses were the answer.” 
</p>

<p>
But not all rowhomes would be the same. By the 1850s, Baltimore was on the cusp of an industrial revolution, with its newfound prosperity  reflected in the latest Italianate style, reserved
for the city’s emerging middle and upper classes, as well as the
manufacturing elite. From Mount Vernon and Bolton Hill to western
squares—Union, Franklin, Harlem, Lafayette—the three-story style was
bigger and more elaborately embellished with the likes of marble,
cornices, and cast iron. In time, builders also constructed modest
versions on side streets and alleys for the everyman, located near
factories, breweries, and mills, from Locust Point and Pigtown to
Hampden, Canton, and Brewers Hill.</p>
<p>“During the 19th century,
rowhouses sheltered almost all Baltimoreans,
from the very rich to the very poor,”
and across racial and ethnic lines, too,
write Hayward and Belfoure. Back then,
“The two-story houses that were put up in my boyhood . . . all had a kind of unity, and many of them were far from unbeautiful,”
recalled H.L. Mencken in <i>The Baltimore Sun</i> of his 1883 Hollins Street
home, also describing them as “sometimes very charming” and “always dignified.”
</p>

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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>Rowhouses, circa 1940s. <i>Courtesy of the Maryland Center for History & Culture</i>.</center></h5>
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<p>
But the real boom came at the turn of the 20th century. As steam-powered
machinery further reduced material cost and increased production, large-scale developers
started buying up acres of countryside and building en masse—no longer focusing on
single rows but entire blocks and even neighborhoods, largely for the working-class.
To lurein customers, each added their own distinct "touch of class.” Like Edward Gallagher, who installed
stained-glass transoms around Patterson Park. Or Frank Novak, dubbed the “two-story king of East Baltimore,” who laid some of
the first marble steps near McElderry Park.</p>
<p>From early on, we eschewed
other dense housing like tenements and apartments as a source of pride, wrote
George Howard in his 1873 <i>The Monumental City</i>. Even “the humblest mechanic or
laborer can ensconce his family in a modest dwelling and surround them with the
pleasures and comforts of home.” For many, these rows were the American Dream, with many an immigrant family living upstairs while opening a business on the first floor.
</p>

<p>
Soon, transportation further accelerated development. By the 1880s, Baltimore’s
first streetcars drew more prosperous residents north to a variety of mansion-esque, Renaissance
Revival-style rows: the dark, decorative Queen Annes, like Belvedere Terrace and
Reservoir Hill; the rounded “swell fronts,” as in Mid-Town Belvedere or Edmondson;
the white-clad “marble houses,” near Clifton or Carroll Park; the pastoral
“porch fronts” around Charles Village and Montebello.
</p>

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<p>
This period marked the start of suburban
exodus, as residents of a certain means sought space, but also segregation,
by both class and race. Despite early integration,
hysteria ensued as Baltimore’s Black population
doubled in the early days of the Great Migration.
In 1910, the city enacted the nation’s first redlining law that banned
Black residents from living in white neighborhoods,
exiling them instead to overcrowded blocks
to the east and west, where they still fostered their own
thriving communities. Meanwhile, zoning commissions were enlisted to enforce city-county lines, spurning the
rowhouse as a symbol of urban decline.
</p>

<p>
And yet it endured, fanning out even farther
through the automobile age. Competing with the county suburbs,
new “daylight” styles sprung up for white-collar workers on roads bound towards the city limits, these even-wider rowhomes adding front porches, lawns, rear garages,
and a window for nearly every room. Near old Memorial Stadium, Ednor Gardens is a prime example, with floral and pastoral landscaping.</p>
<p>But the writing was on the wall. Cities had fallen out of fashion, and after World War II, houses were still being replicated—
just now as cul-de-sac after cul-de-sac of single-family <i>detached</i>
dwellings in the suburbs, a la Levittown. Then, in the name of
urban renewal, bulldozers came for the city’s rows.
But luckily, not long after, so did the first waves of preservationists, with
dollar-house homesteaders igniting an ongoing
praxis of restoring these historic homes. Ironically,
Baltimore’s stalled growth over the last half-century
might have played a part in saving them, too.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>Rowhouses in Canton, circa 1905. <i>Courtesy of the MCHC.</i></center></h5>
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<p>
More recently, Mayor Brandon Scott has announced
plans to tackle the city’s 13,000 vacant
houses by investing $3 billion to restore entire blocks over the next
15 years. And there are a variety of city and state tax credits that also exist for
buying or rehabbing rowhomes, as well as grants like
Live Baltimore’s <a href="https://livebaltimore.com/bbb/">Buy Back the Block</a> program.
Last year, 6,500 attached houses were sold in
Baltimore, compared to 1,200 detached, as new
generations continue to discover them. Those numbers will soon include some of the buzziest construction projects, including Locke Landing in Baltimore Peninsula and Reservoir Square in Reservoir Hill, which, despite heralding themselves as townhouses, are clear descendants of humble rowhomes. 
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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>Residents hanging on their rowhome stoops. <i>Courtesy of the BCA</i>.
</center></h5>
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<p>
Still standing, these resilient rows continue to tell volumes
about this city. From block to block, or neighborhood to neighborhood, styles evolved, and the structures adapted to changing times and needs. Even within a single home, there is
a wellspring of stories—from the hardwood floors
to the brick façades to the tin ceilings—each linking
Baltimore’s past and future, as we explore below.</p>
<p>And altogether over time, from utilitarian dwelling to Baltimore icon, this local icon
has become one of the city’s great unifiers, then and now housing every walk of Baltimorean. For better or worse, we share walls, and and without garage doors or driveways, we spill out onto our sidewalks, stoops, porches, and roofdecks together, turning neighborhoods into communities.</p>
<p>
“It’s not so much the house itself than all
the houses together, and the people in them,” says
CHAP’s Holcomb, leaning back in his desk chair. “What’s that cliché? The whole
is greater than the sum of its parts.”
</p>

<h5 class="clan thin captionPic text-center">OPENING COLLAGE: ROWHOME, STAIRS, & AWNING: CHRISTOPHER MYERS; MAN/BRICK: BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF INDUSTRY; RENDERING DETAIL: LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. ALL OTHER PHOTOGRAPHY: SHUTTERSTOCK.</h5>


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<h2 class="eaves3 uppers text-center" style="margin: 0em;">
Brick
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<h4 class="eaves">
At the Foundation
</h4>
<p class="eaves2 ">
AN ESSENTIAL ELEMENT EMERGED FROM THE GROUND UP.
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<p>
hen Captain John Smith made his 1608
voyage up the Chesapeake Bay and into
the Patapsco River, what stood out to the
English explorer as the distinguishing
characteristic of what would become Baltimore’s
basin was its color: “a great red bank of clay.”
</p>
<p>
It seems Smith was looking south, to Federal Hill,
which at the time was not the gently sloping grassy
knoll we know today, but a series of steep and ragged
bluffs, their rich raw earth exposed.
</p>
<p>
“You can imagine coming into the harbor, and
amidst this heavily wooded landscape, there’s just this
gigantic clay mound that pops up out of the water,” says
David Gleason, president of the <a href="https://www.preservationsociety.com/">Society for Preservation
of Federal Hill and Fells Point</a>. “It would have certainly
made an impact.”
</p>
<p>
And so it did. A century later, as industry emerged
along those very shorelines, an elaborate network of
tunnels was carved beneath that hillside, initially to excavate
its prized clay for making pottery—but also brick.
</p>
<p>
Today, as in the times of Smith, the color red remains
one of the most apparent attributes of Baltimore,
thanks to our ubiquitous brick-built rowhomes, each a
byproduct of the local landscape. On the cusp of the
Piedmont Plateau and Atlantic Coastal Plain, we sit
atop a plentitude of prehistoric clay deposits, which
were mined, molded, and fired into the literal building
block of this city as it endures today.
</p>
<p>
“The growth, the shapes, and even the color of Baltimore
have been greatly affected, from earliest days, by
the fortuitous presence underfoot of an abundance of
rich, gooey clay,” wrote <i>The Sun</i> in 1952.
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<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>The city’s rich brick making industry. <i>Courtesy of Baltimore Museum of Industry.</i></center></h5>
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<p>
Lore has it that our first
bricks arrived via England as
the ballast of ships, but local
clay was used for brickmaking
in Baltimore as early as the
1700s. And when, at the turn
of the 19th century, city ordinance
outlawed wood-frame
construction for fire prevention, it ignited a boom for brick—more durable than
lumber and abundant than stone—and in turn helped meet the home-building
demand of our rapidly growing city.
</p>
<p>
Of course, many major American cities built with brick, but the material
“really becomes synonymous with Baltimore,” says Gleason. “This was a great
epicenter of brick manufacturing, and from early on, you can see the high
degree of skill that went into making it here.”
</p>
<p>
The earliest brickyards were south and west of the Inner Harbor, including
one under M&T Bank Stadium and another at Mount Clare. At first, the bricks
were made by hand, with both enslaved and hired workers cranking them out
with astonishing speed. Their wares were used for home-building within the
vicinity, but with the advent of railroads, were eventually shipped out across
the country, gaining an international reputation.
</p>
<p>
The machine age only increased quality and quantity, with some 30 million
made a year leading up to the Civil War. By the turn of the 20th century, most
operations merged into the massive Baltimore Brick Company, located on 1,200
acres near Orangeville, where steam-powered shovels and later gas-fired kilns
churned plumes of smoke into the air.
</p>
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<p>
But a brick is more than just a brick in Baltimore. Walk the city and you’ll
come across a whole variety—sometimes in a single home. There are the handmade
versions of earlier eras, still found in harbor-front neighborhoods. Or the
smooth pressed “face” brick of the 19th century, which became the go-to for
façades. Rough “common” brick was structural, and what’s often revealed in
exposed walls now.</p>
<p>Also of note are the various bonds of brick, aka patterns in
which they’re laid by masons, from the old-school “Flemish” to the more contemporary
“running”—first into oyster-shell mortar, then later Portland cement. Not to mention the brick embellishments, from doorways
to windows to cornices (see Belvedere Terrace in Greenmount West).
</p>
<p>
Eventually, times changed, and the brickyards closed—their prodigious clay
pits filled in, then built over with new neighborhoods, at times with row after
row made from that very same brick, those colorful façades standing the test
of time. “It’s a beautiful orange-ish red,” says Gleason, “and when the sun hits
it, it can be really striking.”
</p>
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<h4 class="eaves uppers" style="letter-spacing: 0.5rem;">
Lumber
</h4>
<p class="eaves2 uppers">
THE CHARM OF ANCIENT TREES
 </p>
 
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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-bottom:2rem;">
 
<p>
When Max Pollack of <a href="https://www.almanachardwood.com/">Almanac
Hardwood</a> gets a stack of lumber
salvaged from Baltimore
rowhomes, he knows one thing
for sure: It’s going to be yellow
pine. In the city’s early days,
we built our houses with logs
from local groves of white
pine. By the turn of the 20th
century, though, they’d been
all but Lorax-ed, and so we
moved on to the massive yellow
pine forests of the Deep
South.</p>
<p>A dense, durable wood,
it was shipped up the Chesapeake
by schooner, milled in
the many lumberyards of what
is now Harbor East, then used
in every inch of building, from
flooring and joists to studs. At
the time, these slow-growing
trees were upwards of 150
feet tall, four feet wide, and
five centuries old, yielding
ring-rich grains full of resin,
making them especially colorful
and fragrant.</p>
<p>“Nothing we
buy today compares,” says
Pollack, noting that the yellow
pines, too, were eventually
clear-cut, replaced by the
younger Douglas fir and hemlock
of the Pacific Northwest.
“It is truly one of the most
beautiful woods there is.”
</p>

<h5 class="clan thin captionPic" style="text-align:left;">BELOW: Illustration by IStock/Mateusz Atroszko.</h5>

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<div class="greenbox">
</div>

<p>
In 1892, one-time
Fells Point ship
caulker Frederick
Douglass built five
brick rowhouses
on the 500 block
of South Dallas
Street as rental
properties for
Black residents,
which still
stand today.
</p>


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<hr>



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<h2 class="eaves3 uppers text-center" style="margin: 0em;">
Marble
</h2>

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<h4 class="eaves">
A Vision In White
</h4>
<p class="eaves2">
OUR HISTORIC STOOPS ENDURE AS A BEACON OF CIVIC PRIDE.
 </p>
 
 <div class="graybox">
</div>
 
 </div>
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<img decoding="async" class="secondCharacter" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/MAY25_Rowhome_P.png"/>
<p>
erhaps the most prolific image of Baltimore
is a black-and-white, circa-1946
photograph taken by <i>The Sun’s</i> A. Aubrey
Bodine. In <i>Wash Day</i>, men, women,
and children assemble along Penrose
Avenue near Franklin Square. Armed with brushes
and buckets, crouched on hand and knee, a sea of suds
running behind them down the street, they are taking
part in a ritual performed for more than a century in
this city—the cleaning of the marble steps.
</p>
<p>
“In any block, there is seldom a day that someone is
not out scrubbing them,” wrote Bodine. “On the older
houses, the scraping of countless thousands of footsteps
has worn grooves in the stone.”
</p>
<p>
Stairs, steps, stoops—these white-stone entranceways
have become as much a symbol of this city’s local
pride as Orioles baseball or National Bohemian, and
arguably the rowhome’s most beloved detail. Thousands
of them stand guard from north to south, over east and
west, in nearly every city neighborhood.
</p>
<p>
It all began in the early 1800s, when a vast vein
of white stone was discovered underground in Cockeysville.
Before long, the Beaver Dam quarry would
become one of the major sources of marble in the
United States, ushering in our “Monument City” era—the material helping to make Mount Vernon’s Washington
Monument, as well as Washington, D.C.’s. (Not
to mention City Hall, the Enoch Pratt, the Peabody,
and even the nation’s Capitol.)
</p>
<div class="picWrap3">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/MAY25-Rowhome_beaver-quarry.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>The Beaver Dam quarry, circa 1910. <i>Courtesy of the Maryland Center for History & Culture.</i></center></h5>
</div>
<p>
By the turn of the 20th century, as Baltimore
reached an industrial heyday and experienced a
related housing boom, hundreds of laborers were
mining the quarry for its marble—first by hand,
then using steam-powered machinery—with thousands
of tons hauled out each day, hoisted onto
ox-pulled wagons, then heaved down the railroads
to the dozens of marble purveyors in city limits.
</p>
<p>
<a href="https://www.hilgartner.com/">Hilgartner Natural Stone Company</a> was one such
enterprise. Founded in 1863 by German immigrants,
its 30-horsepower saws cut this county marble into everything from the headstones of
Greenmount Cemetery to the halls of The
Walters Art Museum to its most iconic
product—those residential marble steps.
</p>
<p>
Now the country’s oldest continuously
operating stone company, with
a shop still open in Westport, it’s said
to have once been the largest in the nation,
with branches in Chicago and Los
Angeles, as well as an import outpost
in Carrera, Italy (no big deal—just the source of marble for Michelangelo’s
<i>David</i>). And today, their very own sculptor, Sebastian Martorana, transforms old
Cockeysville marble into modern works of art. The stone behind his sculpture
acquired by the Smithsonian in 2012, for instance?
</p>
<p>
“I pulled it out of woods of Druid Hill Park a decade ago,” says Martorana,
an independent contractor for Hilgartner, who, in addition to his art, works as a
carver and restorationist. “A beautiful piece of stone. It had been thrown away.”
</p>
<p>
This was not an uncommon score for Martorana. From early on, salvaged
marble steps (and lintels and ledges) have been the material of choice for this
MICA grad and now Barclay resident, who has rescued them from redevelopment,
demolition, and illegal dumping sites throughout the city. The allure lies
not only in this being a free and attractive medium, known for its dazzling color
and diverse veins, but also that it’s a disappearing resource.
</p>
<p>
“Once it’s gone,” says Martorana, “you can’t replace it.”
</p>
<p>
That's because, after the Great Depression, Cockeysville marble was steadily
replaced by cheaper concrete. The last stone came out of Beaver Dam in 1934,
and within two years, the 200-foot gullies were flooded with natural spring
water. Now, the Beaver Dam Swimming Club offers Baltimoreans a local swimming
hole each summer.
</p>
<div class="picWrap4">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/MAY25_Rowhome_I-Live.png"/>
</div>
<p>
But Martorana and his colleagues still repair plenty of marble steps. Inevitably,
some chip, stain, or come apart from their mortar. His tips for care? Stop
drilling railings into them. And follow the Bodine method: soap and water.
Maybe even a little Ajax or Borox, too. Heck, he’s even used a pressure-washer.
</p>
<p>
“I live in a rowhome in Baltimore City, and marble steps are how we meet
our neighbors,” says Martorana. “I’ve lived next to some for over 15 years, and
I’ve barely been inside their houses. But we see them outside—we <i>stoop</i>. Which
we know is a verb. These stairs are basically outdoor furniture. And believe it
or not, they’re comfortable. Ours face west, and after a sunny day, they’re still
warm in evening.”
</p>

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<div class="medium-8 columns" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:1rem;">
<h4 class="eaves uppers" style="letter-spacing: 0.5rem;">
Glass Block
</h4>
<p class="eaves2">
Adding the industrial touch.
 </p>
<p>
Famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright
once called this the “super building
material.” Invented for factories and
now experiencing a retro resurgence,
these jewel-like cubes have long
provided Baltimoreans with privacy,
security, and the plus of natural light.
</p>


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<div class="greenbox">
</div>
<p>
The 2600 block
of Wilkens
Avenue is home
to the longest
stretch of
rowhouses, with
52 circa-1912
homes known
as the “Deck
of Cards,” near
Carroll Park.
</p>


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<h4 class="eaves uppers" style="letter-spacing: 0.5rem;">
Painted Screens
</h4>
<p class="eaves2 uppers">
A CANVAS FOR COMMUNITY ART
 </p>
 
</div>
</div>


<div class="row" >
<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:4rem;">
 
<p>
Back in the day, during spring in East
Baltimore, the city streets transformed
into an outdoor art museum. First in
“Little Bohemia,” the neighborhoods
north of Patterson Park, and later in
Highlandtown and Canton, you’d find
front doors and windows filled with
painted screens, a quintessentially
Baltimore folk art said to have been
started here by Czech immigrant William
Oktavec in 1913.</p>
<p>Both functional
and aesthetic, they let the breeze in
but the gaze of neighbors out (as well
as disease-carrying mosquitoes), while
also beautifying blue-collar blocks with
no yards and few trees. At one point,
there were as many as 200,000 of
them crafted by dozens of self-taught
artists, says Elaine Eff, founder of the
<a href="https://paintedscreens.org/">Painted Screen Society of Baltimore</a>,
each depicting colorful scenes of pastoral
landscapes and, more recently,
local landmarks, like Domino Sugar.</p>
<p>
“They conveyed a sense of pride for
their homes and city,” says Eff, who
credits the advent of air-conditioning
for their decline. But a handful of enthusiasts
carry on the tradition, with
workshops now offered at the likes of
the Creative Alliance and Maryland
Center for History & Culture, which is
currently planning a permanent exhibition
to showcase the painted screen.
</p>

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<h2 class="eaves3 uppers text-center" style="margin: 0em;">
Formstone
</h2>

</div>
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<h4 class="eaves">
Rock of Ages
</h4>
<p class="eaves2">
THE “POLYESTER OF BRICK” CHANGED THE FACE OF BALTIMORE.
 </p>
 
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 <img decoding="async" class="secondCharacter" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/MAY25_Rowhome_W-e1748414830391.png"/>
<p>
hen you ask an architect or preservationist
about the city’s second-most
iconic façade, often they let out an
audible groan. Love it or hate it, Formstone—aka “the polyester of brick,” as
famed local filmmaker John Waters once put it—is undeniably
intertwined with the fabric of Baltimore.</p>
<p>Patented
here in 1937 by Pikesville resident Albert Knight,
it wasn’t long before block after block of working-class
neighborhoods got a facelift, with the stucco-like faux
stone promising rowhome owners they’d never have
to paint or point their brick again. From Shipley Hill
to Little Italy to Highlandtown, this ersatz rock (and
similar products started by competitors) was applied
directly to building fronts throughout the mid-century,
hand-sculpted into shape and sealed with a sparkling
finish of spray-on mica, perhaps leftover from Beaver
Dam marble.</p>
<p>“Made it look like Hollywood,” recalled
one Highlandtown resident in the 1998 documentary <i>Little Castles</i>, with these newly decked-out digs symbolizing
status and stability.</p>
<p>In total, thousands of
rowhomes were covered in Formstone, which claimed
to keep moisture out and heat in for a cheap price.
But by the 1970s, the bloom was off the rose of this
architectural wonder, which turned out, in fact, to
be a maintenance nightmare, trapping moisture and
causing the original brick to deteriorate. Complaints
rolled in, sales dwindled, and in the decades that
followed, large swaths of Formstone façades were
removed, now dubbed by some as bad taste.</p>
<p>A half-century
later, only a handful of repair and removal
folks remain, but it’s easy to wonder: Is Formstone
actually historic now? Should it be preserved? CHAP,
for its part, takes a neutral stance.</p>
<p>“Eventually, it
will come back in style,” says Waters in <i>Little Castles</i>,
envisioning white-collar residents one day putting it
back up, with a certain irony. “[They’ll] make it chic
again when it’s finally all gone.”
</p>

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<div class="greenbox">
</div>

<p>
The narrowest
rowhome is
200 ½ East
Montgomery
Street in Federal
Hill, measuring
not even nine
feet wide.
</p>


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<h4 class="eaves uppers" style="letter-spacing: 0.5rem;">
Stained Glass
</h4>
<p class="eaves2 uppers">
HIDDEN TREASURES IN PLAIN SIGHT
 </p>
 
</div>
</div>




<div class="row" >
<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:2rem;">
 
<p>
On the 900 block of Luzerne
Avenue, most of the addresses are
etched into the transom above each
door. There, a piece of early 1900s
stained glass is framed in emerald green,
with a complementary pane,
featuring a rosy-pink diamond, built
into the wide adjacent window. It’s
an elegant touch for an otherwise ordinary
stretch of East Baltimore,
included on most of its neighboring
rowhomes, and part of a tradition
that pops up across many of the
surrounding neighborhoods, and
throughout the city.</p>
<p>At the turn of
the 20th century, stained glass
wasn’t just for churches—or the rich.
Local builders incorporated it into a
range of residences, from working-class
to mansion, and in all shapes
and sizes, including skylights. Some
such adornments are small and simple,
such as in Washington Hill and
Broadway East, while others are
large and ornate, like in Mount Vernon
and Bolton Hill. The latter even
includes some Tiffany examples, but
most were forged by the city’s many
glassworks.</p>
<p>By World War II, the
colorful panes fell out of fashion, but
a handful of artisans still carry on
the craft today, at times decorating
them with local details, like blue crabs or Black-eyed
Susans.</p>
<p>For Linda Rabben, author
of <a href="https://shop.mdhistory.org/through-a-glass-darkly-the-social-history-of-stain.html"><i>Through a Glass Darkly</i></a>,
which chronicles Baltimore’s stained-glass
history, these works are a kaleidoscope
of wonder, just waiting to
be discovered. Walk around and
keep an eye out, she suggests. “The
more we look, the more we see.”
</p>

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<div class="greenbox">
</div>

<p>
On a few last rowhomes from Highlandtown to Hampden and Waverly, ceramic Camark cats climb on exterior walls as a decorative midcentury novelty.
</p>


</div>


</div>
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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns">
<h5 class="captionPic thin"><center>Stirling Street renovations, circa 1970s. Home materials at The Loading Dock in East Baltimore today. <i>Courtesy of the MCHC and Christopher Myers, respectively.</i></center></h5>
</div>
</div>

<div class="row">
<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top: 2rem;">
<h4 class="eaves">
Old Gems
</h4>
<p class="eaves2">
Salvage warehouses save a piece of the past.
 </p>

<div class="graybox">
</div>

<p>
Robert Hooke was one of the first in line for Baltimore’s <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/nick-mosby-wants-to-revive-baltimores-dollar-house-program/">“dollar houses”</a> in
1974. That year, he bought a pair of circa-1820 vacant rowhomes on the 600 block
of Stirling Street, for a total of two bucks, and got to work right away on renovating them.</p>

<div class="picWrap4">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/MAY25_Rowhome_They-Dont.png"/>
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<p>
A Loch Raven native, Hooke had read about Mayor William Donald Schaefer’s
affordable-housing, urban-renewal program in <i>The Baltimore Sun</i>. Not long after it got off the ground, requests
from these new residents rolled into the city, asking if they could salvage the
historic materials remaining in other vacants bound for the wrecking ball to
use in their rehabs.</p>
<p>“Baltimore was knocking down entire blocks, making way
for Route 40, which is how the Salvage Depot got started,” says Hooke, who,
in 1975, was hired by CHAP to run the city’s own retail outlet for architectural
scrap, the first of its kind in the country.</p>
<p>With a small crew, they culled the
clawfoot bathtubs, mahogany doors, fireplace mantels, tin ceilings, metal cornices,
entire staircases, and, of course, marble steps, which they sold back to the
public for a song on Pratt Street. “We saved a lot—you name it, we had it,” says
Hooke.</p>
<p>For two decades, the Salvage Depot preserved some of Baltimore’s finest
but fast-disappearing details, most of which were no longer being made locally,
and certainly not to the same standard. A laborious effort, it closed in the
’90s, but similar treasures can still be found at outfits like The Loading Dock,
Second Chance, Housewerks, and Habitat for
Humanity’s ReStore.</p>
<p>Now a mason himself—
the reclaimed archway he added to his old
Stirling Street rowhomes can be seen from the back alley today—
Hooke continues to have a soft spot for the craftsmanship
of the past.</p>
<p>“Everything now is done fast
and cheap,” he says. “It’s harder to renovate
than build new—nothing’s square, nothing’s
plumb. But they don’t make them like they
used to. It was a work of passion for me.”
</p>

</div>
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<div class="greenbox">
</div>

<p>
Artist Loring Corning transformed the facades of two Parkwood Avenue rowhomes into fanciful glass mosaics in Reservoir Hill.
</p>


</div>


</div>
</div>


<div style="background-color:#fee9e9; margin-top:1rem; margin-bottom:1rem;">

<div class="row" style="padding-top:4rem;">
<div class="medium-6 push-3 columns text-center">

<h4 class="eaves" style="letter-spacing: 0.5rem;">
RESIDENCES OF NOTE
</h4>
<p class="eaves2 uppers">
A rowhome retrospective of famous Baltimore residents.
 </p>
 
</div>
</div>



<div class="row" >
<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:2rem; padding-bottom:2rem;">
 
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
ELIJAH CUMMINGS
</h5>
<p>
2014 MADISON AVE., RESERVOIR HILL.
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD
</h5> 
<p>
1300 PARK AVENUE, MT. VERNON.
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
BILLIE HOLLIDAY
</h5> 
<p>
216 S. DURHAM ST., UPPER FELLS. 
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
LILLIE CARROLL JACKSON
</h5> 
<p>
1320 EUTAW PL., UPTON.
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
THURGOOD MARSHALL
</h5> 
<p>
1623 DIVISION ST., UPTON.
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
H.L. MENCKEN
</h5>
<p>
1524 HOLLINS ST., UNION SQUARE.
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
NANCY PELOSI
</h5> 
<p>
25 ALBEMARLE ST., LITTLE ITALY. 
</p>
</div>
 <div class="medium-4 columns" >
<h5>
EDGAR ALLAN POE
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203 N. AMITY ST., POPPLETON.
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BABE RUTH
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316 EMORY STREET, UNION SQUARE.
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WILLIAM DONALD SCHAEFER
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620 EDGEWOOD ST., EDGEWOOD.
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GERTRUDE STEIN
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215 E. BIDDLE ST., MID-TOWN BELVEDERE.
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TUPAC SHAKUR
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<p>
3955 GREENMOUNT AVE., PEN LUCY. 
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FRANK ZAPPA
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2019 WHITTIER AVE., MONDAWMIN.
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<p>
In harbor-front neighborhoods, those beloved roof decks were first added around Federal Hill in the 1990s.
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/homegarden/baltimore-rowhome-architectural-history/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>This Couple Combined Two Patterson Park Rowhomes for Family, Fun, and Community</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/homegarden/adjoining-patterson-park-rowhome-renovation-combines-event-space-family-home/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Apr 2022 22:12:11 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Home & Living]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friendsgiving]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Heather Keating]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jimmy Edgerton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patterson Park]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[renovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rowhomes]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=119267</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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			<p>Most people don&#8217;t purchase a second home before they’ve settled on the first, much less the house next door, but Jimmy Edgerton and Heather Keating are not your average couple. After noticing their soon-to-be next-door neighbor moving out before they closed on the purchase of their rowhome, they decided to “swing for the fences,” says Edgerton.</p>
<p>Keating is the marketing and communications director at the <a href="https://www.creativealliance.org/">Creative Alliance</a> and a MICA-trained photographer and graphic designer. She’s also an avid community event organizer. Edgerton is an adjunct professor at Tufts University, a consultant specializing in food product development and management strategy, as well as a licensed civil engineer and LEED-certified builder.</p>
<p>When the creative duo and committed city dwellers were ready to put down roots, they chose Patterson Park. By March 2020, both homes were theirs.</p>
<p>“We could see the pandemic coming and didn’t want a developer banging away,” says Edgerton. “We wanted to control what was happening next door.” Then the conversation inevitably shifted to: What do we do with these two houses?</p>
<p>“We knew we didn’t want to do a cookie-cutter rehab,” says Keating. The more they thought about it, they realized the purchase of neighboring homes made sense. Edgerton’s parents live in Vermont and wanted a place where they could stay for long visits. Keating, who has spent years throwing events in rented restaurants or private rooms in bars, wanted a flexible entertainment space that she and Edgerton could use for huge “Friendsgivings” and for community meetings and parties, a place that was both home-like and full of character.</p>
<p>The duo were perfect partners when it came to renovating. Keating has an artist’s eye, a penchant for Pinterest boards, and a high tolerance for whimsy. Edgerton is a detail-oriented project manager who can take Keating’s ideas and refine them to perfection.</p>
<p>With help from architect Kathleen Leichleiter at Twopoint Studio and a host of subcontractors, they transformed one house into their comfortable family home and the other into a multi-generational apartment/party/occasional Airbnb space they dubbed the Fox Den, with the two connected by strategic passages.</p>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img decoding="async" width="1200" height="1645" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/5I5A3520_CMYK.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-full" alt="" title="5I5A3520_CMYK" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/5I5A3520_CMYK.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/5I5A3520_CMYK-584x800.jpg 584w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/5I5A3520_CMYK-768x1053.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/5I5A3520_CMYK-1120x1536.jpg 1120w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/5I5A3520_CMYK-480x658.jpg 480w" sizes="(max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" /></div><figcaption class="vc_figure-caption">The entryway to the Fox Den, the adjoining rowhome the couple renovated into an Airbnb and community gathering place.</figcaption>
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to the family home through strategic passages. It has large flexible entertaining areas displaying original architectural details and vintage finds.</figcaption>
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			<p>Second Chance helped gut the homes and reduce landfill waste in the process. “They saved the pieces we wanted,” says Keating. That included the homes’ mantles and beams—even an old window from the demolished sleeping porch found a place in the redesign. “We put as many pieces back as we could or repurposed them elsewhere in the house.” The rear of both homes was removed to enable the back to extend and to gain a full, additional room on the third floors. The crown jewel of the renovation is a double-wide rooftop deck.</p>
<p>The Fox Den features a main entertainment and dining space that can comfortably seat 30 people, though the four tables purchased at Su Casa in Fells Point can also convert to sideboards if the occasion requires. The custom-designed drink rail is perfectly sized to hold a cocktail. And while the room currently houses a collection of B-movie posters from Keating’s uncle (who worked at a theater when he was young), the art can also change for a special event’s needs—or be removed entirely for wall projection.</p>
<p>Edgerton designed the entertaining room to have a mezzanine looking down on the entry level, which also provides a well-lit spot for the many orphaned houseplants Keating has adopted over the years and that are now flourishing.</p>
<p>A catering kitchen with a six-burner Viking range and full bar ensures plenty of food and drink for parties. And a dumbwaiter large enough to hold a rolling catering cart connects from the first floor all the way to the rooftop deck. “The deck has been great, especially during the pandemic, for outdoor family events,” says Keating.</p>

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			<p>To fulfill its goal to be a flexible, fun, and income-producing property, the Fox Den has a full suite on its third floor that’s home to the in-laws when they visit, and open to rent when they’re not. (Both basements were also excavated—creating a rental apartment and a petite efficiency suite that can be used for friends or an au pair.) The couple repurposed many original features into the suite, like using old beams to build a loft and using original wood subflooring to create a headboard behind the guest bed.</p>
<p>Keating says she loves to bounce between the two homes. While the Fox Den is chic, cool, and calm, their family house side is cozy, a mix of midcentury modern with contemporary aesthetics. “Working in vintage pieces has been really important to me,” says Keating. “And there’s a lot of whimsy, too.”</p>
<p>It’s a project that reflects the artistic sensibilities of its owners. Keating’s mother is a glass artist and she created three custom stained glassed windows for the homes. A beautiful window of green and blue gingko leaves installed at the top of the main staircase sets the tone for the home’s soothing color scheme, carried through in everything from the teal Joybird sofa in the living room to beloved artworks by Matt Muirhead and Heather Farrell.</p>
<p>“I hit a teal phase and have stayed there,” laughs Keating. “I’m a little teal-obsessed.”</p>

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			<p>Edgerton has done rehabs before, but nothing like this, with the engineering feat of a huge rooftop deck and with “the flexibility to use the space as we need it—for ourselves, for multi-generational family, for extra help, and for income production.”</p>
<p>This creative alliance became official when Keating and Edgerton married in September 2020—six months after starting the renovation. The home’s flex space is about to get a workout with a new baby and the arrival of adoring grandparents. But the home already passed its first big test—hosting Friendsgiving this past November.</p>

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			<p>“It was everything we wanted it to be,” Keating says. “We had candles everywhere and a huge potluck and we cooked two turkeys at once.” Friends from around the city and colleagues from Creative Alliance joined with a host of others to celebrate. “We’re both not only family-oriented but community-oriented,” Keating continues. “Those connections are important to us. We’re really contributing to creating a sense of welcome on our block.”</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/homegarden/adjoining-patterson-park-rowhome-renovation-combines-event-space-family-home/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Brick + Board Salvages the Prized Clay Bricks and Yellow Pine of Baltimore’s Abandoned Rowhouses</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/brick-and-board-salvages-clay-bricks-yellow-pine-baltimores-abandoned-rowhouses/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:50:34 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore rowhomes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brick + Board]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[clay bricks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Max Pollack]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rowhomes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rowhouses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[yellow pine]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=110971</guid>

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			<p>Max Pollock lasted six weeks at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School.</p>
<p>“From the first day, it felt like everyone was being groomed for a big firm,” says the 36-year-old Takoma Park native. “It was going to snap any sense of creativity I had, and I was afraid of becoming a robot. One day, I saw a young guy fixing up an old Victorian house in Philadelphia, and I wanted to do that instead.”</p>
<p>Not that he had carpentry experience, but Pollock sent an email to the small eco-conscious construction company that was rehabbing the home and asked if he could join the team.</p>
<p>“They basically said, ‘Yup, you can come and be free labor and push a broom.’” Quitting law school, he says, was “the best decision I ever made.”</p>
<p>He didn’t fully commit to the rehabbing lifestyle just yet. After pushing that broom for a while, he went on to graduate school and even took a housing policy job in D.C. Then, in 2014, he made what may well be the second-best decision he’s ever made: launching <a href="https://www.brickandboard.com/">Brick + Board</a>, which salvages the prized clay bricks and yellow pine of Baltimore’s abandoned rowhouses and resells the refurbished materials to builders, contractors, and craftsmen. (Pollock began his “deconstruction” career with the Baltimore nonprofit Humanim and spun Brick + Board, now a for-profit enterprise, out of Humanim.)</p>
<p>From the beginning, Brick + Board’s mission has also focused on workforce development, hiring individuals who have barriers to employment, and providing training in salvage, carpentry, millwork, and warehouse management at its Howard and 25th Street lumberyard. More recently, Brick + Board has been making similar reclamation forays into older homes, buildings, and barns in the surrounding counties and region.</p>
<p>Baltimore is built upon great clay beds, notes Pollock, who has become something of a brick historian and collector over the years, with a particular expertise on the once-great Baltimore Brick Co. It’s in his blood, he jokes. His mother’s last name, Kirpich, means “brick” in Russian.</p>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1200" height="798" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/BRICKboardMAX__100myers.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-full" alt="" title="BRICKboardMAX__100myers" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/BRICKboardMAX__100myers.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/BRICKboardMAX__100myers-768x511.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/BRICKboardMAX__100myers-900x600.jpg 900w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/BRICKboardMAX__100myers-480x319.jpg 480w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" /></div><figcaption class="vc_figure-caption">—Photography by Christopher Myers </figcaption>
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			<p>For 70 years, from the 1890s until 1968, the Baltimore Brick Co. set their East Monument Street kilns to bake at nearly 2,000 degrees, using mules at one time to lug their product to local construction sites, according to <em>The Baltimore Sun</em>.</p>
<p>In any city, it’s the geography and geology that determine the way it looks, Pollock says, with a nod to our ubiquitous brick rowhouses and beloved marble stoops, most of it quarried from sites in Baltimore County. He adds that it’s been both a blessing and a curse that nearly all the rowhomes in Baltimore were framed with wood from old growth, southern yellow pine forests. Harvested to near-extinction in the decades after the Civil War, the quality and grain of our yellow pine is treasured by high-end rehabbers, craftsmen, and furniture makers.</p>
<p>Originally, Pollock believes, a good deal of the yellow pine arrived as lumber, coming by schooner up the Chesapeake Bay from North Carolina and Georgia to Baltimore. At least some of that yellow pine, after a century supporting homes in East Baltimore, was put to repurpose in the Exelon high-rise at Harbor Point.</p>
<p>Other reclaimed wood at Brick + Board gets sold each week, through a partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, to national furniture retailer Room &amp; Board, where it’s transformed, for example, into their McKean console table line—so named for the street of demolished West Baltimore rowhouses that it came from. The price would shock the original homeowners, were they still around: $1,199.</p>
<p>Pollock’s favorite finds over the years include signed and dated, turn-of-the-century bricks, as well as floorboards from long-ago duckpin bowling lanes on Howard Street. The building looked like any vacant storefront scheduled to be gutted, but those lanes, Pollock learned after salvaging them, are believed to have been part of the barroom there owned by 1890s Orioles third baseman John McGraw and catcher Wilbert Robinson. As colorful a duo as were ever in the game, the pugnacious McGraw and affable Robinson not only created a baseball dynasty in Baltimore, they invented duckpin bowling at their saloon, “The Diamond.”</p>
<p>“This was a few years ago, and I know a guy who does a lot of the work at Union Craft Brewery, building their bars and tables. He told me they were updating their space and he was looking for tabletop material,” Pollock says. “I was like, ‘Holy shit, Union Craft Brewery? They make Duckpin ale. I will give this to you.’”</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/brick-and-board-salvages-clay-bricks-yellow-pine-baltimores-abandoned-rowhouses/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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