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edina country club district

The
Edina Country Club District was listed in the National Register of
Historic Places in 1980, but was not included in the City’s heritage
preservation overlay district. The Heritage Preservation Board (HPB)
recommended re-designation of the National Register district as an Edina
Heritage Landmark District pursuant to the 2002 amendments to the City’s
historic preservation code.
The Country Club District is featured in several publications, including
History and Architecture of Edina, Minnesota by William W. Scott and
Jeffrey A. Hess (City of Edina, 1981), and Chapters in the City
History: Edina by Deborah Morse-Kahn (City of Edina 1998).
DESCRIPTION
The Edina Country Club, located in the heart of the City, is a
residential suburban neighborhood covering a 14-block area along
Minnehaha Creek north of West 50th Street. The District boundaries
encompass approximately 559 dwellings and a City park. The former
Wooddale School and four private homes located within the original
National Register district boundaries have been razed since 1980.
HISTORICAL
AND ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE
The County Club District was platted in 1924 by Thorpe Brothers Realty
Company and the majority of the homes were constructed between 1924 and
1941. The historical significance of the District is the product of its
association with the themes of community planning, zoning, and suburban
residential development. The Edina Country Club District was one of the
first modern planned communities in Minnesota and the land use controls
exercised by the original Country Club Association formed the basis of
the municipal zoning ordinance adopted in 1929.
The District represents a significant, well-preserved concentration of
historic domestic architecture and related historic landscape features.
Examples of English Cottage (Tudor), Colonial Revival, Mediterranean
(Spanish Colonial Revival), and Italian Renaissance Revival style homes
predominate. In 1980, 36 percent of the buildings in the District were
regarded as having “pivotal” historical significance and 63 percent were
evaluated as “complimentary” (i.e., contributing to the historic
character of the District). There has been relatively little postwar
infill construction. In general, the District retains a high degree of
historic integrity and the majority of the historic homes are in a good
state of preservation. It is the city’s intent to re-evaluate the
properties identified in the 1980 National Register documentation as
pivotal, in particular the Liebenberg and Kaplan-designed model homes on
Edina Boulevard and Moorland Avenue, for future consideration as
individually designated Edina Heritage Landmarks.
EVALUATION
OF LANDMARK ELIGIBILITY
On Sept. 24, 2002, the Edina HPB determined that the Edina Country Club
District met the Edina Heritage Landmark eligibility criteria (City Code
§850.20 subd. 2) on the basis of its association with important events
that reflect significant broad patterns in local history and its
embodiment of distinctive architectural characteristics. The HPB
evaluated the significance of the District within the local historic
context “Country Club District: Edina’s First Planned Community (1921 to
1950),” a historic preservation-planning unit is outlined in the Edina
Historic Contexts Study adopted in 1999. The HPB found that it retained
historic integrity of those features necessary to convey its historical
and architectural preservation values.
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Plan of Treatment |
Download the Plan of Treatment approved by the
City Council in 2008. |
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