This two-story wood-framed structure has a long rectangular plan and flaring hipped roof. The walls are clad in variegated stone, including granite, limestone and sandstone, uncommon in Fort Worth. A concrete block garage adjoining on the east appears to date from about the same time. The rock-veneered building was erected in 1935 by Catholic Charities of Fort Worth as a dormitory and laundry for the St. Teresa Home. The architect was Charles F. Allen. The main building, dating largely from 1930, no longer stands. The dormitory is now used as a community center, and may be eligible for the National Register following more precise documentation of the building’s integrity and of the importance of the St. Teresa Home. There are several examples of stone veneer buildings in this section of South Fort Worth from the 1930s and 1940s (see 1701 E. Bessie Street, 360-62 Riverside Drive, and 1605 E. Hattie Street). If more intact examples are found and with further documentation, these properties may be eligible for the National Register of Historic Places under a Multiple Property Submission for stone veneer construction.