House and Garden 
150 feet long are to be the principal features of the 
club-house. There are also to be provided lounging 
rooms, committee rooms, small library, administra¬ 
tion departments, service rooms, etc. It is suggested 
that the service and servants’ entrances should be on 
Second Avenue towards the elevated road. The 
elevated is to provide a station with entrance and 
exits near the club. [ he club must screen the ele¬ 
vated road and some special treatment may be 
suggested for the road between 35th and 36th Streets, 
and monumental entrances to the quadrangle should 
be provided where 35th Street and 36th Street come 
into the general scheme at the northwest and south¬ 
west corners of the quadrangle, and this should be 
made to compose with the club and the surrounding 
buildings. 
While there must be no interruption in the general 
circulation of First and Second Avenues, 35th and 
36th Streets between First and Second Avenues may 
be treated as part ol the general scheme without 
reference to their extending lines. 
Somewhere not far from the restaurant must be 
provided an auto garage, and not too far from the 
museum and library provision should be made for 
ship stores; also a small library and club-house mak¬ 
ing a meeting place for sailors. 
In the architectural treatment of the quadrangle or 
approaches should be provided a monument or 
fountain “To the Memory of John Paul Jones, the 
Founder of the American Navy,” and perhaps some 
memorials to the men who have done active work for 
the improvement of navigation and the development 
of naval architecture in the history of civilization. 
For the preliminary sketches there must be fur¬ 
nished a general plan at the scale 1-64 inch equals 
one foot, and a facade from the river at the same 
scale; also a longitudinal section from the quad¬ 
rangle and extending from the river to Second Ave¬ 
nue and the elevated road. 
For the finished drawings a main plan should be 
given showing the treatment of the basin and ap¬ 
proaches, layout of the park and of the buildings 
suggested, and elevations from the river showing the 
scheme from 34th to 37th Streets, also a longitudinal 
section at the same scale from 34th Street to Second 
Avenue to the elevated road, and a detail of any 
corner of any building at J4 inch scale. 
1 he above programme furnished some interesting 
projets, which were exhibited and judged this last 
summer. I he jury selected as the winner of the 
“Paris Prize” for 1905 Mr. John Wynkoop, of the 
Atelier Donn Barber, 147 East 42nd Street, New 
York. Mr. Wynkoop has qualified in every partic¬ 
ular and has lately arrived in Paris to begin his work 
there in the Ecole. Illustrations from photographs 
of the winning drawings are shown in this article. 
104 
RESIDENCE OF E. W. CLARK, ESQ., CHESTNUT HILL, PHILADELPHIA 
George T. Pearson Architect 
