The neighborhood was built after the industrial boom following the move of what would become Allis-Chalmers to West Allis, with contributing homes built from 1928 to 1952.[2] Contributing homes include, roughly in the order built:
The Lajsich home at 2151 S. Livingston Terrace is a 1928 bungalow with hip roof.[3]
The Hundly house at 2133 S. Livingston Terrace is a hip-roofed brick-clad bungalow built in 1928.[4]
The Galle house at 2169 S. Livingston Terrace is another 1928 bungalow, this one with clipped gables and probably built by Val. Nitzsche Jr.[5]
The Sternberger house at 2180 S. Livingston Terrace is another 1.5-story bungalow with clipped gables built in 1928, this one by Walter Zielinski.[6]
The Waisanen duplex at 6627-6629 W. Revere Place is a 1.5-story brick-clad bungalow with clipped gables, built in 1929.[7]
The Pfeiffer house at 2164 S. Livingston Terrace is a 1.5-story home designed by David Conrad Co. in Tudor Revival style and built in 1929.[8]
The Cielichowski house at 6616 W. Revere Place is a 1.5-story Tudor Revival home built in 1929, probably by Solomon Gaviser.[9]
The Whittemore home at 6608 W. Grant Street is a 1.5-story bungalow with clipped gables, built in 1929.[10]
The Holberg house at 2163 S. Livingston Drive is another bungalow with clipped gables, built in 1929 by H,. Gersonde & Sons.[11]
The Brandon home at 2150 S. Livingston Terrace is a Colonial Revival-styled home built by H. Gersonde & Sons in 1929.[12]
The Selan home at 6622 W. Revere Place is a bungalow/Tudor Revival hybrid built by Anton J. Berres in 1929.[13]
The Schwinn house at 6612 W. Grant Street is a brick-clad Mediterranean Revival-styled house built in 1929 by Miswald Construction.[14]
The Janowski home at 6625 W. Grant Street is a 2.5-story Tudor Revival home designed by Erdman & Zahn and built in 1931.[15]
The Roska house at 6705 W. Grant Street is a 1.5-story stone-clad Tudor Revival house built in 1932 by Roth & Taplin.[16]
The Jacobs house at 2138 S. Livingston Terrace was designed by George A. Kemnitz in French Provincial style and built in 1932.[17]
The Huber house at 6726 W. Grant Street is a 1.5-story stone-clad Tudor Revival home built in 1935 by Roth and Taplin.[18]
The Rupnik house at 6626 W. Revere Place is another bungalow, built by Roth & Taplin in 1936.[19]
The Buchen house at 2146 S. Livingston Terrace is a 1.5-story stone-clad bungalow built by H.P. Schroeder in 1941.[20]
The Dwyer-McMicken duplex at 6600-6602 W. Grant Street is 2-story brick-clad cube with a hip roof, built by the Dwyer-McMicken Building Company in 1944.[21]
The Sundberg duplex at 6642-6644 Revere Place is a 2-story brick-clad duplex built in 1952. Its brickwork at the corners suggests quoins.[22]
The neighborhood stands out for its curving streets, which contrast with the rectangular grid of the rest of the city.[2]
Most of the houses are in the period revival styles of the 1920s and 30s. None of the earlier architectural styles are present: no Gothic Revival, no Queen Anne, and not even a Prairie style house. Their complete absence in the district illustrates how rigidly residential architectural styles follow fashion.