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Baltimore County commission approves door work at former Methodist Protestant Church but requires wood windows
Summary
The Baltimore County Landmarks Preservation Commission approved replacement of two rear doors and concrete aprons at 301 Allegheny Ave., Towson, but rejected aluminum-clad windows and required all operable replacement windows to be full wood; inoperable Gothic windows will be reconditioned.
The Baltimore County Landmarks Preservation Commission on May heard an application for 301 Allegheny Ave., the former Methodist Protestant Church and Woman's Club of Towson, and voted to approve rear door and apron replacements while rejecting the applicant's proposed aluminum-clad window replacements and requiring wood replacement windows for operable openings.
The property at 301 Allegheny Ave., listed on Baltimore County's final landmarks list (No. 246), was built in 1911 and contributes to Towson's ecclesiastical and civic history, staff said. The applicant proposed replacing two nonhistoric rear doors with Accoya wood doors (a durable modified softwood) and removing and replacing the concrete aprons at those rear entrances. The commission had no objection to the…
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