Dominion Hills
USA /
Virginia /
Seven Corners /
World
/ USA
/ Virginia
/ Seven Corners
World / United States / Virginia
NRHP - National Register of Historic Places, residential neighbourhood, historic district, Colonial Revival (architecture)
www.dominionhills.net
Residential neighborhood listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), where it is designated a historic district.
"Dominion Hills in Arlington County is important as a planned mid-20th-century residential neighborhood. It consists exclusively of two-story Colonial Revival-style houses constructed between 1945 and 1948. Initially platted in 1942 by two independent builders, the subdivision did not take shape until shortly before the end of World War II due to a shortage of necessary building materials and supplies created by the war. In April 1945 two development companies, working separately yet in concert as merchant builders, commenced construction with one builder developing Dominion Hills. The builders used repetition of form, style, materials, and setting to create a cohesive suburb. As result, unlike many neighborhoods in Arlington County that display a variety of architectural styles from different periods of construction, Dominion Hills exhibits a singular architectural style with only a handful of models of minimal variation. Dominion Hills demonstrates the merchant builders’ principles of mass production, standardization, and large-scale development that is infrequent in Arlington County yet is reflective of post-war development in the U.S. At the time of its listing, the neighborhood was one of only three merchant-builder neighborhoods in the county."
--Virginia Department of Historic Resources
Residential neighborhood listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), where it is designated a historic district.
"Dominion Hills in Arlington County is important as a planned mid-20th-century residential neighborhood. It consists exclusively of two-story Colonial Revival-style houses constructed between 1945 and 1948. Initially platted in 1942 by two independent builders, the subdivision did not take shape until shortly before the end of World War II due to a shortage of necessary building materials and supplies created by the war. In April 1945 two development companies, working separately yet in concert as merchant builders, commenced construction with one builder developing Dominion Hills. The builders used repetition of form, style, materials, and setting to create a cohesive suburb. As result, unlike many neighborhoods in Arlington County that display a variety of architectural styles from different periods of construction, Dominion Hills exhibits a singular architectural style with only a handful of models of minimal variation. Dominion Hills demonstrates the merchant builders’ principles of mass production, standardization, and large-scale development that is infrequent in Arlington County yet is reflective of post-war development in the U.S. At the time of its listing, the neighborhood was one of only three merchant-builder neighborhoods in the county."
--Virginia Department of Historic Resources
Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominion_Hills_Historic_District
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 38°52'39"N 77°8'25"W
- Bluemont 0.8 km
- Douglas Park 3.2 km
- East Falls Church 3.7 km
- Fairlington 4.8 km
- Cleveland Park 9 km
- Randolph Hills 20 km
- Hampshire Greens Colf Course Community 31 km
- Broad Run Farms 34 km
- Forest Lakes 100 km
- The Highlands 157 km
- Seven Corners, Virginia 1.4 km
- Leeway Overlee 1.8 km
- Arlington Forest 2.2 km
- Sleepy Hollow Citizens' Association 2.6 km
- Lake Barcroft, Virginia 3 km
- Arlington County, Virginia 3.4 km
- Bailey's Crossroads, Virginia 3.6 km
- West Falls Church, Virginia 4.5 km
- Annandale, Virginia 6.1 km
- Fairfax County, Virginia 14 km