Each house in this row of six identical shotgun houses has a gable roof, offset shed-roofed entrance portico and channel rustic siding. The row is a late example of this folk-house type given its 1954 construction date. American Standard Life Insurance Co. contracted with the Euless Lumber Co. to build this development as low-income housing. The houses are fourteen feet wide and are spaced ten feet apart. Upon attaining fifty years of age, this development may be eligible for the National Register because of its historic interest as a late example of a folk-house type adapted for low-income housing.