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Edificio del Valle

1941 establishments in Puerto RicoMission Revival architecture in Puerto RicoNational Register of Historic Places in San Juan, Puerto RicoPuerto Rican building and structure stubsPuerto Rico Registered Historic Place stubs
Residential buildings completed in 1941Residential buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Puerto RicoSanturce, San Juan, Puerto RicoSpanish Revival architecture in Puerto Rico
Edificio del valle
Edificio del valle

Edificio del Valle is a historic mixed-use building located at 1118 Ponce de León Avenue of Santurce in San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was built in 1941 by the Santurce Development Company and designed by famed Puerto Rican architect Rafael Carmoega, who also designed famous buildings such as the Capitol of Puerto Rico and the University of Puerto Rico clock tower among others. It is a five-story reinforced concrete structure with commercial and retail spaces on its ground level and 16 apartments in the rest. Edificio del Valle has a distinctive Spanish/Mission Revival-style, evident in many of Carmoega's works, with eclectic elements that reference both the local vernacular, Neoclassical and the Modernist styles of the period.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Edificio del Valle (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Edificio del Valle
Avenida Juan Ponce de León, San Juan Santurce (Santurce)

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N 18.4513815 ° E -66.0756527 °
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Avenida Juan Ponce de León 1116
00907 San Juan, Santurce (Santurce)
Puerto Rico, United States
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Edificio del valle
Edificio del valle
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Instituto Loaiza Cordero para Niños Ciegos Historic District

The Instituto Loaiza Cordero para Niños Ciegos (lit., "Loaiza Cordero Institute for Blind Children"), also known as the Instituto Puertorriqueño para Niños Ciegos (lit., "Puerto Rican Institute for Blind Children"), is a former hospital and school complex for blind children and now a historic district located in the Santurce area of the city of San Juan, Puerto Rico. The historic district is located in a large urban block in the Figueroa subbarrio of Santurce, bound by the Avenida Manuel Fernández Juncos to the northeast, Avenida Hipódromo to the southeast, Las Palmas Street to the southwest and Figueroa Street to the northwest. The historic district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2018 due to its historical and architectural significance.It was designed by architect Joseph O'Reilly who worked closely with Loaiza Cordero herself. The namesake of the institute is Loaiza Cordero del Rosario, a partially blind educator, public servant and poet who was highly involved in the development, construction and management of the site. Native to Yauco, she was part of the first graduate class (1907) of the Normal Industrial School (Escuela Normal Industrial), one of the institutions that would later become the University of Puerto Rico. Loaiza Cordero became a schoolteacher afterwards, an endeavor that was cut short after finding herself partially blind. She was forced to resign from her position but later enrolled at a two-year program at the Perkins Institution for the Blind in Watertown, Massachusetts. This experienced motivated her to resume her education career and to bring education services to children in Puerto Rico. She soon lobbied in the Puerto Rican government for the creation of infrastructure for blind individuals in the island which resulted in the creation of several blind schools throughout the island and the then-called Puerto Rican Institute for Blind Children. The development of the institution was the first of its kind in Puerto Rico and one of the earliest of its kind in the United States that would bring pedagogical, architectural and urban planning ideas together. The complex was design to provide safety, comfort and mobility to blind children, evident in the use of Braille in both Spanish and English throughout the whole site. In addition to Joseph O'Reilly, engineers Manuel L. Miró and Demetrio del Valle were also involved in the construction of the complex according to a dedicative plaque located at the site today.The Loaiza Cordero Institute historic district designations consists of two contributing buildings (the former hospital and schoolhouse for blind children), a former park and playground also designed for blind children, an allée-like road that transverses the institutes and an ornamental fountain.

Villa Victoria (San Juan, Puerto Rico)
Villa Victoria (San Juan, Puerto Rico)

Villa Victoria is a historic house located in the Santurce area of the city of San Juan, Puerto Rico. Formerly a private single-family residence, Villa Victoria has served as a local chapter and the San Juan headquarters of the YWCA since 1955, and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.Built in a French Colonial-style popular at the time, Villa Victoria dates to the early 20th-century. No record of the architect or builder exists, but records from 1917 show that it was built at a time of urban residential expansion in the Miramar area of Santurce which was the result of a population boom and the establishment of the Carretera Central that linked San Juan to Ponce. Although built after the American occupation of Puerto Rico, its building methods evoke the traditional techniques of residential building construction from the Spanish colonial period during the 19th century. This type of residential construction was very typical in Miramar during the period between 1900 and 1920. Its first documented owners were Thomas George Waymouth and his wife, of the Waymouth Estate Company, followed by Ramón Mora and wife Teresa Nicolao. Records show that in 1940 it was bought by Jenaro Suárez and wife Ethel Natalie Wigmore, under whom Villa Victoria underwent numerous renovations with the addition of plumbing and electrical infrastructure. It was then purchased by Irma Cuevas de Kearney and Marianne Goettsch in 1955 on behalf of the YWCA, when the internal partitions of the first floor were demolished. Today it remains as the Puerto Rico headquarters of said organization and it also hosts a local chapter.