Its exterior is rock-faced concrete blocks laid in running bond.
It was deemed significant "as the only house remaining in the Danish Town area that was constructed prior to 1937.
It is also the only known house in Sandy constructed of rockfaced concrete block, a building material that was popular during the first few decades of the twentieth century.
The house also is the only one south of Creek Road that is still owned by a descendant of the original settler of the Danish Town area, and was certainly the most substantial one from the era.
This article about a property in Utah on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.