Round House (Somerville, Massachusetts)

For other uses, see Roundhouse (disambiguation).
Round House

The facade of the Round House in 2006.
General information
Status Complete
Type Residential
Address 36 Atherton Street
Town or city Somerville, Massachusetts
Country United States
Completed 1856
Owner George E. Saropoulos
Anna Maria H. Saropoulos
Dimensions
Other dimensions 40-foot (12 m) diameter
Technical details
Floor count 3
Floor area 1,256.64 square feet (0.028848 acres)
Design and construction
Architect Enoch Robinson
Designations Endangered Historic Resources (1997)

The Round House is a cylindrical, wood-frame residential building at 36 Atherton Street in the Spring Hill neighborhood of Somerville, Massachusetts, United States. It was built in 1856 by hardware manufacturer Enoch Robinson, and is considered an offshoot of the octagon house-style popularized by phrenologist Orson Fowler.

The exterior of the Round House features two flush stories, with a third stepped back behind a series of battlements and embrasures. Inside, the three-story structure contains a central rotunda topped with a glass skylight, with interconnected rooms branching off on each level. There are four rooms on the first floor, six rooms on the second floor and another four rooms on the third floor.

History

In the early 2000s, the privately owned house was unoccupied, its windows removed to the interior of the house, and the openings were covered with plywood. Its ornamentation was largely removed, and all of the ceilings were severely damaged from water. In a 1986 restoration program, students from Boston's North Bennet Street School did a small amount of work renovating the exterior, but the project fell apart and the house remained in a state of decay.

Historic Massachusetts (now Preservation MASS) placed the building on its list of Endangered Historic Resources for 1997.

The Round House in 2008 as renovation begins
Postcard from 1913 showing Robinson Round House


By April, 2007, the Round House had been purchased by a local man who is also president of a general contracting firm. Signs placed on the property in early January 2008 advertised nearby Diamond Edge Construction, and the thick brush filling the yard was largely removed. According to a letter[1] from Brandon Wilson, executive director of the Somerville Historic Preservation Commission, the building and property would be completely restored and would function as a single family residence when complete.

References

Further reading

External links

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Coordinates: 42°23′04″N 71°06′28″W / 42.384478°N 71.107671°W