Blackey House

Place Description

The Blackey House is a one and one-half story shingled Craftsman bungalow, situated on a large lot on Cadder Avenue at the corner of Abbott Street, set far back on the property with a large grassed yard with shrubs and mature coniferous and deciduous trees. It sits within a grouping of houses of compatible age and style in Kelowna's historic Abbott Street neighbourhood.

Heritage Value

Built in 1920, the Blackey House is valued as a very good local example of Craftsman architecture, a style popular between 1910 and 1930. Elements of this style exhibited by the house include medium-pitched gabled roofs, an open front verandah, cedar shingle siding, and exposed rafter tails and purlins. It typifies the comfortable lifestyle of its middle class occupants. The home was occupied by members of the Blackey family until the 1940s; Peter Blackey (1851-1934) was a retired wholesale dry goods merchant.

Furthermore, the Blackey House is significant as a demonstration of the economic activity and wealth of Kelowna during the post-First World War era, when fruit production became the local economic engine. The house was built during Kelowna's second phase of residential expansion, and reflects the city's development as the population and economic base increased, due to the growth of the fruit industry.

Character Defining Elements

Key elements that define the heritage character of the Blackey House include its:
- deep set back on a substantial corner property with mature trees and manicured lawn;
- residential form, scale and massing as expressed by its one and one-half storey height, full basement, square bay window with shed roof and irregular rectangular plan;
- wood-frame construction and concrete foundation;
- medium-pitched cross-gabled roof with asymmetrical slopes and projecting front gable extension;
- Craftsman style details such as the cedar shingle siding, half-timbering in the gable ends, exposed rafter tails and purlins, and wraparound verandah with tapered piers and square columns;
- additional exterior details such as closed balustrades with drainage scuppers, rear entrance shed roof and two red brick chimneys (one internal and one external); and
- irregular fenestration with multiple assembly, multi-paned double-hung windows, and small square fixed sash windows on either side of the fireplace.