After the crash President Obama funded a huge program called the Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP).  Cities nationwide were given money to buy and rehab properties made vacant problems by the crash.  Elgin received over 2 million dollars.   With it they bought eight properties.  One they tore down as it was too far gone.

Just recently they have started work on building a new house in its place.  Three houses they oversaw their own rehabilitation of spending a terrific amount of money to rehab very nicely.  They all now have great new owners.  When a house is nasty it attracts desperate people.  You have to make them nice to attract decent people.    Four homes they gave to Habitat for Humanity to rehab.   This was one.  It was a two unit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

They hired an architect to draw up plans for the porches.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As a volunteer, I made the balls in the balustrade, the front porch gable ornament, the rails, newels, brackets and porch skirting.  The design for the skirting came from a porch nearby.  Habitat stripped most of the paint off of the house, rehabbed the interior nicely, and rebuilt the porches. The only thing that could have been done better is to make the posts meatier.

 

Here it is today:

It was fun being a part of it.

 

 

 Porches recreated by Neighborhood Housing Services

In the early 80’s Neighborhood Housing Services (NHS) and the city of

Elgin bought 326 E. Chicago with the upper level to be for the NHS office and the bottom floor to be rented out as an apartment.  It was purchased for $55,000.

A neighbor came forward with an old picture showing how it used to look.  The city and NHS board decided to put this amazing house back to how it used to look.  It cost $50,000 with a public outcry with people saying more money was put into the home that it will ever be worth.  They were wrong.  With it being on a heavily trafficked street it was noticed by all and became an inspiration for others to renovate their homes in the neighborhood.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While the home was under construction a neighbor came forward saying that he had garbage picked the original front door when the house was being rehabbed.  He gave it back to us.

 

 

 

 

At the time Elgin had only one restoration carpenter and that was Dave Hunt.  A local woodworker, John Haight made the posts, the balustrade and the friez at the top of the porch. He passed away but his family currently runs The Haight, a funky wedding venue downtown in the space that used to be his shop.

Here is the home under construction.

 

 

This is how it looks today and is being used as the
home for the neighborhoods ROPE Officer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NHS used the home for their offices for several years and then decided to do it again by buying another home to rehab for new offices.  205 N. Gifford was purchased for $40,000.  It was a flophouse with padlocks on every door.  The back stairs and basement were filled to the ceiling with junk as the owner was a pack rat.  Volunteers filled two dumpsters to clean it out.  An architect was hired  to make exterior plans and specs for the inside.  The first floor was to be the new NHS office and the second was to be  rented out.  This picture shows it shortly after the fake brick asphalt siding was taken off.

 

This picture shows the south side.  The Sandborn map showed that it had a bay window on the south side where the multi-paned window is in the picture. It was decided to put it back.  The Sandborn also showed

that the porch was only on the front of the house.  It was decided to put an appropriate one back.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Picture showing the new bay window.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I made the brackets and posts for the porch and the brackets for the bay window.

 

 

 

The home was featured on the ElginHistoric Housewalk.  Click here to view the booklet page which gives some history of the home.

NHS sold the home to a private homeowner who owned it for many years. She lost her job and could not maintain it.

 

The building deteriorated badly.

 

 

 

 

A flipper bought the house and with the help of a city grant put all new siding on the house, restored the porches and upgraded the interior nicely.

 

Current interior and exterior pictures.