John Roffler House

The John Roffler House is a historic house located at 1437 NE Everett Street in Camas, Washington.

John Roffler House
Facade of house in 2014
John Roffler House
Location of house in Washington (state)
John Roffler House
Location of house in the United States
Location1437 NE Everett St., Camas, Washington
Coordinates45°35′27″N 122°24′16″W
Arealess than 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Builtc.1906
ArchitectJohn Roffler
Architectural styleQueen Anne
NRHP reference No.93000368
Added to NRHP29 April 1993[1]

Description and history

The two story wood frame Roffler House sits on the southwest corner of NE 15th Street and Everett Street across from Crown Park in Camas' upper residential area. The floor plan is an L shape with intersecting two story wings with gabled roofs. The facade features a porch with roof sheltering the square entry bay. The foundation is concrete and wall treatments are drop siding with corner boards on the lower floor and shingles on the upper. The roof material is wood shingles added in a modern renovation. At the juncture of the wings a brick chimney extends above the roof ridge. An engaged turret rises above the entry porch roof. Large bay windows in the gable ends light the first floor, a projecting bay on the east wing has three tall one over one double hung sash. Window framing is plain wood surrounds. The north gable end has a box bay with a tripartite window arrangement covered by a pent roof.

John Roffler was the community's most prolific architect/builder. This building was constructed c.1906 to be his family home. It was the first execution of a design by Roffler in Camas. Roffler impacted the built environment of the community more than any other individual. The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 29, 1993.[2]

gollark: Except we don't need prediction now, you could just data mine the response to this off discord in theory.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: If you use sufficiently complex methods to choose boxes, the simulator has to basically simulate the entire universe and thus the simulation is basically "real" (depending on your philosophical outlook).
gollark: You don't pick B, you pick either just A or A+B.
gollark: But, considering only somehow "real" universes, your choice after the boxes are filled can't affect the contents and it's "strictly better" to take both, as this provides more money than taking one. But everyone who does this gets less money than the oneboxer people due to them being predicted as doing that. Thus paradox.

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System  John Roffler House (#93000368)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2 November 2013.
  2. Alves, Sally; Garfield, L. (29 Apr 1993). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: John Roffler House". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. Retrieved 26 Feb 2020. With a photo from 1992.
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