Bremond Block Historic District
The Bremond Block Historic District is a collection of eleven historic homes in downtown Austin, Texas, United States, constructed from the 1850s to 1910.
History
The Bremond Block Historic District was added to National Register of Historic Places in 1970, and is considered one of the few remaining upper-class Victorian neighborhoods of the middle to late nineteenth century in Texas. Six of these houses were built or expanded for members of the families of brothers Eugene and John Bremond, who were prominent in late-nineteenth-century Austin social, merchandising, and banking circles. They are located within the square block bordered by West Seventh, West Eighth, Guadalupe, and San Antonio streets. The district also includes several houses on the west side of San Antonio and the south side of West Seventh, at least three of which were built or altered by the North family. The John and Pierre Bremond houses are currently owned by the Texas Classroom Teachers Association, and the John Bremond house serves as the headquarters for the association.Buildings in the Bremond Block Historic District
The historic district consists of eleven structures.| Name | Built | Renovated | Address |
| James T. Brown House | 1858 | 610 Guadalupe St | |
| John Bremond, Jr. House | 1886 | 700 Guadalupe St | |
| Phillips-Bremond-Houston House | 1854 | 706 Guadalupe St | |
| Pierre Bremond House | 1898 | 402 W 7th St | |
| Eugene Bremond House | 1873 | 404 W 7th St | |
| North Flats-Howson House | 1879 | 2007 | 700 San Antonio St |
| William Franklin North Apartment | 1910 | 702 San Antonio St | |
| Catherine Robinson House | 1891 | 705 San Antonio St | |
| North Cottage | 1879 | 706 San Antonio St | |
| North-Evans Château/Austin Women's Club | 1874 | 1894 | 708 San Antonio St |
| Walter Bremond House | 1872 | 1887–1888 | 711 San Antonio St |
North-Evans Château (1874)
The North-Evans Château was originally completed in 1874 and is located on San Antonio Street. The building is constructed from rough, limestone blocks. Alfred Giles renovated and enlarged the building in 1894, "into a late Victorian castle, with crenellation, Romanesque arcades in many galleries, a tower, and high terraces with huge buttressed retaining walls."Also known as Chateau Bellevue, the house was acquired by the Austin Women's Club in November 1929 and still the headquarters of the club as of April 2025. In 2024, the club celebrated the sesquecentennial of the chateau.