• Home
  • Search
  • Browse Collections
  • My Account
  • About
  • DC Network Digital Commons Network™
Skip to main content
VCU Scholars Compass Virginia Commonwealth University We are the Uncommon Give to VCU
  • Home
  • About
  • FAQ
  • My Account

Home > Digital Collections > Richmond Architectural Survey Collection

Richmond Architectural Survey Collection

Digital Collections come from a broad range of sources, including materials that are offensive or contain negative stereotypes. VCU Libraries provides access to these items to support research and inquiry.

About this collection
This collection contains data sheets that identify and evaluate over 600 structures located in Richmond’s Jackson Ward and Oregon Hill neighborhoods. The surveys were compiled by the City of Richmond’s Department of Planning and Community Development in the mid-1970s. The evaluations were intended to be used in preservation plans and for city planning as a whole. These data sheets predate the standard survey forms used in Virginia since the 1980s.

The survey form included a section identifying the building, its basic architecture, and the date of construction. A separate section was used to evaluate the structure’s architectural significance. The forms were color-coded: yellow for Jackson Ward, green for Oregon Hill. Many of them also included one or more photographs of the buildings that were evaluated. In presenting these, we show the original data sheet with the photograph attached, as well as separate images of the photographs themselves. Occasionally, there were also separate Assessors Property Cards included, with further details on the buildings, presented here as separate images.

The data sheets reflect the bias at the time against vernacular architecture. Often, smaller and more simply designed buildings were considered less important architecturally, and less important to preserve. These views began to change in the 1980s when city planners and architectural historians began to consider vernacular architecture as important as other designed buildings. These changing views led preservation efforts to save entire blocks and not just key buildings.

Supplemental Material
Preliminary architectural character overview of the three blocks of Oregon Hill contained by Belvidere, Cumberland, S. Cherry and Cary Street, a 1975 document credited to Wright, Cox, and Smith and the Richmond (Va.). Dept. of Planning and Community Development consists of a two page overview evaluating the architectural significance of a three block area of Oregon Hill. Includes 14 pages of photocopied photographs.

Browse by neighborhood
Jackson Ward
Oregon Hill

The physical collection is housed at James Branch Cabell Library Special Collections and Archives.

Copyright
This material is in the public domain in the United States and thus is free of any copyright restriction. Acknowledgment of Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries as a source is requested.

Credits
VCU Libraries digitized this collection in 2008. Jennifer Cason supervised student employees, digitization, and quality control. Student employees Kaitlin Foray and Kelly Crone assisted with digitization. Metadata Librarian Mary Anne Dyer created the metadata for this digital collection.

Printing is not supported at the primary Gallery Thumbnail page. Please first navigate to a specific Image before printing.

Follow

Switch View to List View Slideshow
 
  • Idlewood Ave. - Survey Form by Richmond (Va.). Dept. of Planning and Community Development

    Idlewood Ave. - Survey Form

  • Monroe + Catherine Street - Photograph by Richmond (Va.). Dept. of Planning and Community Development

    Monroe + Catherine Street - Photograph

  • Monroe + Catherine Street - Survey Form by Richmond (Va.). Dept. of Planning and Community Development

    Monroe + Catherine Street - Survey Form

  • West Clay Street - Madison Street - Brook Road - Survey Form by Richmond (Va.). Dept. of Planning and Community Development

    West Clay Street - Madison Street - Brook Road - Survey Form

 

Page 23 of 23

  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
 
 

Browse

  • Collections
  • Disciplines
  • Authors

Search

Advanced Search

  • Notify me via email or RSS

Author Corner

  • Author FAQ

Links

  • VCU Libraries
  • Author Rights/Copyright
  • VCU Libraries Digital Exhibits

Gallery Locations

  • View gallery on map
  • View gallery in Google Earth
 
Elsevier - Digital Commons

Home | About | FAQ | My Account | Accessibility Statement

Privacy Copyright

Virginia Commonwealth University | VCU Libraries | Contact Us

Virginia Commonwealth University is a nationally renowned public research institution dedicated to the success and well-being of all members of its community. VCU student, faculty and staff groups and associations are open without regard to any characteristic or identity protected by law.