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Cool House

How fabulous to find this great article about our neighbors, The Moncayos!

Image by Ottavau Zappala

Although Anthony and Debbie Moncayo lived only a mile away from West Second Street, for the past 37 years they had been coveting the neighborhood from afar. They admired the tree-lined streets, the irrigated lots, the sidewalks where people are often seen walking their dogs, and the friendly neighbors sitting out on their porches.

Then, last year, all the stars aligned when they retired and a home they liked came up on the market.

“The timing of everything was such that it worked out this time,” Debbie Moncayo remembers. “Before things would come available, but our kids were still in college, something would come up for sale and we weren’t considering moving...”

CITY'S FIRST HISTORIC DISTRICT

West Second Street is Mesa’s first historic district, having existed since the city was established. Some of the most prominent middle and upper-class families built homes here in the early 1900s. The neighborhood was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998, and nowadays its residents organize a yearly self-guided walking tour of select homes.

The neighborhood’s 50 homes are probably the most architecturally diverse in all of Mesa. The streets display some of the last remaining citrus-lined medians.

But aside from the houses, what’s outstanding about the area is the pride of this community and the preservation efforts made by its residents, individuals who have invested large sums of money renovating their homes, successfully integrating the past with the present.

The “Hanna Richards House” was built around 1927 as the residence of Mrs. Richards and her children. Later, a dress shop owner named Sam Fried lived in the house though the 1940s.

The property is said to illustrate the transition in style from the bungalow of the 1920s to the period Revival movement of the 1930s. more


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