Every Lowry Hill News story tagged Home Preservation.

A few blocks of Mount Curve Avenue in Lowry Hill hold a working catalog of how wealthy Minneapolis built between 1900 and 1910, from Renaissance Revival to Prairie School.

Lowry Hill's standing as one of Minneapolis's costliest neighborhoods traces to a streetcar-era boom that filled the ridge with mansions, most of which still stand.

The Lowry Hill East Residential Historic District preserves streetcar-era homes on the 2300 and 2400 blocks of Aldrich, Bryant and Colfax Avenues South.

A 1906 yellow-brick mansion on Mount Curve Avenue, built for brewer Charles Gluek, is one of Lowry Hill's better-preserved examples of Italian Renaissance design.

Groveland Terrace shared in the Lowry Hill real-estate boom of the 1890s and early 1900s, lined with grand houses built to the same standard as neighboring Mount Curve Avenue.

Built for a member of the Donaldson department-store family, the nearly 9,600-square-foot house is one of Lowry Hill's finest.

Owners of the century-old houses along Mount Curve Avenue describe their role as stewardship, and the Lowry Hill Neighborhood Association documents the homes they maintain.
Free. No paywall. Pick the topics you want — we send what’s happening this week.