czsz
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2007
- Messages
- 6,043
- Reaction score
- 6
^ Missing a historic opportunity to let these eyesores disappear...
Re: "do other major cities have them?" - according to at least one architectural history professor whose quote I read somewhere, the triple-decker was exported by migrants from New England to the Upper Midwest and a variation forms most of the housing stock in Great Lakes cities like Buffalo, Milwaukee, and Chicago, where it's referred to as a "three flat".
If you ask me, there's a strong similarity in many of the tall Victorian houses in SF, too, though I can't confirm that they have the same progeny.
Meanwhile, the mid-Atlantic rowhouse took a different trajectory, spreading along the Ohio Valley to Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and St. Louis...
Re: "do other major cities have them?" - according to at least one architectural history professor whose quote I read somewhere, the triple-decker was exported by migrants from New England to the Upper Midwest and a variation forms most of the housing stock in Great Lakes cities like Buffalo, Milwaukee, and Chicago, where it's referred to as a "three flat".
If you ask me, there's a strong similarity in many of the tall Victorian houses in SF, too, though I can't confirm that they have the same progeny.
Meanwhile, the mid-Atlantic rowhouse took a different trajectory, spreading along the Ohio Valley to Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and St. Louis...