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| The Bulletin:
This Old House The Kensington
Apartments – 180 North Main Street Historian Roger Roper, in his 1999 Utah Historical Quarterly article, “Homemakers in Transition,” notes that many of the occupants of these apartments were women who were at crossroads in their lies – young working women and older widows. Apartments such as the Kensington were well-built (the Kensington had gas and electric appliances and central heat) and well-maintained (work crews at the Kensington washed the walls and refurbished the wood floors of each apartment on an annual basis.) The builders of the Kensington, the Covey Investment Company, marketed their apartments to middle- and upper-class women. The Covey Investment Company was the largest of the many companies that owned apartment buildings in Salt Lake City. The Company, headed by Stephen M. Covey, built many apartments similar to the Kensington, such as the Covey and Hillcrest complexes in the lower Avenues. The Kensington, constructed oin 1906, is a good example of the historic “walk-up”-type apartment building in which each apartment is accessed from a central stairway. The Kensington’s brick construction, flat roof, parapet walls, and balconies are typical features for apartments of this type and age in Salt Lake City. The building’s neoclassical architectural detailing is most apparent on its balconies, with classical columns and entablatures. The Kensington remained
owned by its original owners for decades. It has remained a well-maintained
apartment complex, even though the work crews no longer wash the walls
annually. The building, and the many other turn-of-the-century apartments
in the city, serve as a good model for future housing at the next turn-of-the-century.
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