It is a 1+1⁄2-story brick-and-frame house with a front-facing gable. The brick is buff-colored.[2]
It was deemed significant "as one of Paris' handsomest and most substantial bungalows. It is one of the relatively few in brick; it projects the characteristic features of the bungalow type while retaining a curiously Queen Anne quality in its exhuberant [sic] combination of textures and imaginative fenestration. The use of narrow ceiling and larger strips on the very large gable like that on the similar Fred Price bungalow (site #67) is a bold example of a device pecularily popular in bungalows. The lattice-like gable apron, and the beveled bay, are unique elements."[2]