We’ll move into and out of the study area, starting with the commercial development fronting Route 725, moving back into the site, and out again..

The strip center, Mad River Station, was developed by Beerman Reality, and has a feature found in the first Beerman developments of the late 1940s; second story spec office space. So this is a bit of a throwback to early postwar suburbia. This type of two-story mixed use is fairly unusual for a 1980s strip center.


Barnes &Noble was the last structure built

The back of the strip center, with blank ground floor wall, due to this being the storage/service side of the ground floor retail

…facing the apartment complex to the rear. Proximate, but no intentional connectivity (missed opportunity).….

Water feature, Recall this was roughly on the course of that Hole’s Creek tributary.

Beyond the apartments Lois Circle narrows and one enters the rump Ingersoll Acres plat. Interesting to see striping here, for high volume traffic.



1954 ranch on huge lot.

1950, according to the county auditors records. Probably one of the earliest modern “ranch style” houses in Dayton suburbia. Nice big picture window. It seems the earlier the spec ranches the better the design.


The assisted living complex. Not shown is a water feature in front, probably a rework of an old pond on the same site.


Finally, a look back at what’s left of Ingersoll Acres, a survival of early postwar exurbia in the heart of a 21st century edge city.

No comments:
Post a Comment