The Aull House (1702 Main): c. 1904. This three-story brick Classic Revival, designed by notable Kansas City Architect William W. Rose, features a third-floor ballroom with six pedimented dormers, a band stand, and a feature Palladian window overlooking the adjacent grounds. Adorning the exterior are a boxed cornice and pediments, dentil molding, two-story balconied portico porches with Ionic fluted columns and exaggerated Scamozzi capitals, two-story fluted pilasters encasing the four corners also with Scamozzi capitals, chiseled radiating stone voussoirs over doors and windows, and stained glass side lights framing the main entrance. Spanning three city lots, the grounds feature mature pecan trees and sufficient space to build a sizable carriage house, conservatory, pool, and formal gardens. Interior spaces feature a foyer, formal entrance hall, twin parlors with sliding panel doors, formal dining room, butler's pantry, ice room, original swinging doors across the "back of house, separate service staircase, grand staircase, ornate trim work, columns, three fireplaces, original laundry shoot, atrium windows, nursery, and red oak flooring throughout save the maple flooring in the original kitchen. A sixth bedroom may be achieved by reverting the second-floor kitchen to its original design. The original kitchen space stands ready for a world-class chef's kitchen redesign.
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