The Hart House (2057 Caroline St.)
This two-and-a-half storey solid brick structure, built in a Second-Empire style, has many distinctive design features. Its Mansard roof has small dormers with arched windows in ornate frames, which have fluted pilasters supporting gabled cornices. The wide eaves are supported by paired wood brackets. The windows and doors have segmental heads with interrupted buff brick accents above and dressed stone keystones. The dressed stone sills have stepped buff brick supports. The quoins are formed of buff brick with red-brick imitation masonry lines between. This familiar landmark building is set back from the street, with a long front avenue lined with mature Norway Spruces, which were pinched long ago into “candlestick” forms. The Hart House and its well-preserved landscape features make a very strong contribution to the streetscape of Caroline Street. This is an essential complement to the neighbouring property, the Cleaver House. These two historic Victorian mansions, combined with the other nearby homes, create an exceptionally variegated heritage residential district on the borders of the commercial sector of downtown Burlington.
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