Michigan : 0. Number of convenience stores no gas : 47 Ingham County : 1. Michigan : 1. Number of convenience stores with gas : 67 Ingham County : 2.
Number of full-service restaurants : This county : 7. Michigan : 6. Adult diabetes rate : This county : 8. Adult obesity rate : Here : Low-income preschool obesity rate : This county : Healthy diet rate : Here: Average overall health of teeth and gums : Mason: Average BMI : Mason: People feeling badly about themselves : Mason: People not drinking alcohol at all : This city: 8. Average hours sleeping at night : This city: 6. Overweight people : Here: General health condition : Mason: Average condition of hearing : Here: Here: 7.
Ingham County: 0. Here: 8. WAAQ WUFN Choose year: According to the data from the years - the average number of fire incidents per year is The highest number of reported fires - 92 took place in , and the least - 15 in The data has a growing trend. When looking into fire subcategories, the most reports belonged to: Structure Fires Top Patent Applicants. Precipitation is evenly distributed throughout the year.
Snowfall is moderate. There are twice as many cloudy days as clear ones year-round. First freeze is end of September, last is mid-May. Recent job growth is Positive. Mason jobs have increased by 1. More Economy. More Voting Stats. Since , it has had a population growth of 3. Learn More The National Average is Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 6.
Selling a home in Michigan? See how to save thousands. The average school expenditure in the U. There are about The strength of Mason lies not only in its individual local history but also in its typicality. It represents a nineteenth-century county seat common to the Midwest whose existence relied on its governmental function and the surrounding farmland.
Free from uncontrolled periods of growth that can damage the historic nature of a community, Mason retains many of its nineteenth- and early twentieth-century structures. These dwellings, stores, churches, and government buildings typify the self-sufficient agricultural service centers of Michigan.
Mason's residential neighborhoods present a variety of visual streetscapes that contain a number of repeated natural elements and architectural details which, in combination, create a unified townscape.
The various nineteenth and twentieth century architectural examples found in each neighborhood are tied together by both man-made and natural elements. Rolled metal roofs, simple wooden door and window surrounds, multi-gabled roofs and multi-paned windows appear on high style as well as simply decorated houses.
Unity among the neighborhoods is enhanced by the consistent size of the lots and the tall maples that canopy the streets. Original outbuildings used for a variety of purposes remain in many neighborhoods. A few excellent examples of completely illustrated styles exist in Mason with rich and varied detailing, but these are rare. The vast majority of homes are simply decorated or can be considered vernacular.
These echo the scale and proportions of the high style homes. A number of Greek Revival residences survive in Mason. These were built by the early settlers through the s and appear most often in the vernacular, upright-and-wing form but also in the form of basilicas.
The more common upright-and-wing is decorated with a low pitched roof, a wide frieze board and symmetrical fenestration, such as South Barnes. The basilica, a derivative of the Roman Hall of Justice with rectangular plan, was adapted as a form for early Christian Churches. In residential architecture, it has a central wing with two smaller flanking wings.
An excellent example is Okemos Street which has a central pediment and stacked umbrage porches. Sprinkled throughout the townscape are late Gothic Revival homes. This picturesque style with steeply pitched roofs and bargeboard decorated eaves was brought to prominence through the publications of Andrew Jackson Downing. This beautifully painted home displays exuberant decorations on the eaves and the porch. During the s and s the Village of Mason was incorporated, the railroad arrived and many new plats were added to the village.
Popular from through , regional residential Italianate examples range from villas with complex massing to simple cubes. The Italianate Villa was a popular style throughout Michigan and was fashioned after the farmhouse architecture found in the Italian countryside.
The more complex villa with a variety of roofs, towers, and round-hooded windows is not found in Mason; however, the simpler cube form of the Italianate does appear fully illustrated at East Ash. This Italianate cube displays gently pitched hipped roof slightly arched, hooded windows and corner pilasters. The Queen Anne style, with its highly irregular massing, myriad of gables and dormers, expansive porches with turned posts, irregularly placed multi-shaped windows and variety of surface treatments is rarely found fully expressed in Mason.
The seeds for the development of this style were planted in America by the interpretations of Richard Norman Shaw's English Revival architecture by H. Richardson and McKim, Mead and White and was most popular during the 's and s. Several fully articulated examples are South Barnes and South Jefferson with their multi-gabled roofs, variety of windows and surface treatments, and irregular massing. But more typical in Mason is West Maple, with "L" shaped massing, two gables, fishscale shingling, small porch with slanted roof, and chamfered window to break up the otherwise regular fenestration.
There is a nice collection of modest Queen Anne homes in Mason. The classically detailed Colonial Revival with regular massing and a gently pitched roof is part of many of Mason's residential streetscapes. Combined with the interest generated by the Nation's Centennial, the reaction against the picturesque styles in the late nineteenth century brought with it the development of the Colonial Revival style.
Several fine interpretations of this style appear in the neighborhoods just south of Mason's Courthouse square. Here, large, two-and-one-half story homes with regular massing stand as evidence of the popularity of this style in Mason. Excellent examples are East Oak and South Jefferson both displaying regular massing and fenestration. There are also many less articulated but noteworthy examples, such as East Ash and South Jefferson.
Clean, simple lines characterize the Craftsman and the Bungalow styles. With dormered roofs, modest heights and comfortable porches, they contribute to the beauty of every streetscape in which they are found. Both of these styles were built in most Mason neighborhoods outside of the immediate circle of the Courthouse.
An excellent example of a Craftsman, found at East Oak Street, displays traditional dormers and a wide sturdy porch and multi-paned windows. The Bungalow is exemplified in Mason by the house at East Oak featuring modest height, regular fenestration and a dormered roof.
More important to Mason's architectural heritage than architectural styles are the house types that became traditional in the community and throughout Michigan during the late nineteenth-century. These traditional or vernacular houses are seen in a variety of forms in the Mason landscape. Flank-gable, hip roof and, most frequently, upright-and-wing seem to be the dominant forms.
They appear generally without any stylistic identification, but with plain corner boards, fascias, simple square-headed board windows, and raking cornices without returns. The common cubical hip roof form, often recognized as Italianate , was also used in earlier Federal and Greek Revival architecture. Navigate your way through foreign places with the help of more personalized maps. Use the satellite view, narrow down your search interactively, save to PDF to get a free printable Mason plan.
Click this icon on the map to see the satellite view, which will dive in deeper into the inner workings of Mason. Feel free to download the PDF version of the Mason, MI map so that you can easily access it while you travel without any means to the Internet.
If you are looking for directions to Mason, MI rather than an online map of all of the places that you are interested in visiting, you also have the option of finding and saving the directions for future use.
You are also able to narrow down your search by selecting only restaurants, for example, that way you can have a list of exactly what it is that you are searching for. You can also use our search box in order to locate any other places that you are interested in finding.
0コメント