Here is a house just down the street. Notice that this house and the one in the previous picture have many design features in common:  it’s also a bungalow and has one- and one-half stories, a similar roof, central dormer, brick pillars with columns, and the front porch across the front.  They look like they were built around the same time, in the early 20th century.  They’re so similar that this house was listed as a “contributing structure” when the research was being done to add this neighborhood as an historic district—meaning that the preservationist thought it was the same age as the house we saw previously—even though it was just one year old at the time.  This is a great example of infill construction that blends in with the neighborhood.