125 Alta Avenue

Also listed as 117 Alta Avenue

Northeast corner Undercliff Street.

Park Hill (2002)

approx. pp. 55-56

2 1/2-story house designed in a formal Georgian manner, faced in red brick laid in Flemish bond with random burned bricks; beige brick quoins; beige brick belt course separates first and second story; limestone splayed lintels with raised keystones; limestone belt course at sill level of second story; symmetrical, five-bay wide facade facing Alta Avenue focusing on projecting, one-story, wood entrance portico with paired Ionic columns, Ionic pilasters, and rooftop railing; paneled door with leaded transom and sidelights; window above entrance with keyed stone surround and stone lintel supported by elongated brackets; 6x6 windows, symmetrical, five-bay wide facade facing Undercliff Street with projecting Doric portico and shallow pediment; side entrance beneath portico with wide leaded sidelights; triplet window above side portico with 6x6 central window flanked by narrower 4x4 windows; widely spaced windows similar to those on front elevation; hip roof with three dormer windows on front and side elevations; central dormer with swan's-neck pediment, flanked by pedimented dormers; pedimented dormers on west elevation; bracketed cornice; beige brick chimneys; wing to north with second-story terrace and wood railing; open Doric porch to west; one-story wing to west; site bordered by stone and brick wall and high iron fence with stone posts capped by balls. Side lot to north (No. 1 17)

Significance: Park Hill (2002), pp. 742-755, identifies this as the home of Denis F. O'Brien, counsel for Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, and Charles Chaplin.

Park Hill West (1994)

approx. p. 22

Jules Breuchard (aka Denis O'Brien) House; two-and-one half story, brick, five bay, Georgian Revival style residence; square plan; Flemish bond brickwork; primary and secondary entrances featuring columned porticos supported on scamozzi and Tuscan columns and sidelighted doors; six-over-six double hung sash windows with stone sills and keystoned lintels; contrasting string course and quoining; tripartite window; hipped roof with modillioned cornice, gable and swan's neck pedimented dormers and towering end chimneys; one story open porch supported on columns; two story, gable roofed side wing; ornamental iron fence with brick posts supporting ball finials.

Significance: Park Hill West (1994), pp. 48-58, identifies this as the 1899 Breuchard House, a Georgian Revival dwelling cited as one of Park Hill's interpretations of the great Georgian houses of the pre-Revolutionary era.

Feature: One story, frame, garden structure, hipped roof; columned porch.

Park Hill (1984)

approx. pp. 408-409

This is a 2 1/2 story, 5 bay Georgian Revival house with a hipped roof and multiple pedimented dormers. The center bay dormers have swans' neck pediments; double hung windows have stone sills and lintels with keystones. Contrasting colored bricks are used to create string courses. There are two porticos; one with Doric columns, pediment and modillioned cornice; other with a flat roof and Ionic columns and entablature. Doorways have sidelights and transom with tracery. There are four chimneys, and multiple one story side additions.

Feature: Wall surrounding lot

Significance: Park Hill (1984), pp. 424-435, identifies this as the former J. Breuchard residence, an 1899 Georgian Revival structure with Flemish bond brickwork, Ionic and Doric columned porches and porticos, keystoned lintels, contrasting quoining, and a symmetrical five-bay facade.

Surveyor: Diane Lutters · Builder: American Real Estate Company

Yonkers Illustrated (1901)

approx. p. 112

The illustrated view shows a large three-story mansion-style residence with a symmetrical facade, tall chimneys, and a wraparound porch, set behind a low wall along a sloping street.

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