The buildings most representative of Professorville are brown-shingled houses with gambrel roofs, whose stylistic influences range from
Colonial Revival to
American Craftsman.
Dutch Colonials are the predominant architecture on three blocks of Kingsley Avenue. One of the largest residences, a 3-story, 14-room frame house at 450 Kingsley Avenue, is the former home of Stanford's first physics professor,
Fernando Sanford, designed by architect Frank McMurray of
Chicago. The house includes features fashionable at the time, such as a
Queen Anne corner tower and a
Palladian window in front. Other former professors' houses include 1005 Bryant Street, built for professor
Frank Angell, who founded the university's Psychology Department, and 433 Melville Avenue, built for professor
Charles Henry Gilbert, founding chair of the Zoology Department, and designed by
Arthur Bridgman Clark, an architect and art professor. The "Dead Houses" (named after the
Grateful Dead) is a cooperative housing community centered in Professorville, primarily inhabited by Stanford students and recent graduates, with notable past tenants including entrepreneur and philanthropist
Sean Parker. ==See also==