2483 Cranmore Road
The Grayson house was built in 1912, and is a two storey, foursquare style house on a corner lot. It has a shallow bell-cast hip roof and wide soffits. The wide porch is supported on granite piers, and wraps partly around to the east façade, culminating in a Craftsman-style gable with notched bargeboards, taking advantage of its corner location.
2483 Cranmore is valued as Oak Bay's best example of a foursquare style home. Its prominent presence on this busy street corner adds immeasurably to the character of the immediate neighbourhood.
Built by contractor Thomas J. Grayson of Thomas Grayson & Sons, contractors, as his own home, this house was undoubtedly a pattern book design, popular at that period, and probably situated as an example of the firm's capabilities.This house also represents the developments of double lots within Oak Bay. It was not uncommon for homes to be built on a double lot, with the second lot being developed some years late. The lot to the west at 2465 Cranmore was developed in 1928, also by Grayson, who at this time was living on nearby Montieth Street.
- original exterior cladding: upper floor clad in stucco; main floor wood shingles and basement level in siding
- two brick chimneys: one exterior on the east façade; one interior on the SW corner
- Large open porch across the front of the house with original wooden railings; wooden railings on upper porch over entry
- large archway springing from two porch posts, over front stairs, and the entry porch ceiling is a shallow barrel vault in tongue and groove wood.
- large granite porch piers with red pointing
- prominent soffits with modillion brackets
- stained glass windows in stairway window on west side; stained glass on upper floor, south side; also entry door
- leaded glass casement windows on upper floors; leaded upper sash on upper double-hung windows on east façade
- double height hanging bay windows on east façade
- single height hanging bay windows on south façade