Built in 1905 in the Swiss Chalet Revival, it exemplifies the architectural impact of one of Cleveland's largest immigrant communities.
He emigrated to the United States in 1882,[2] and in 1883 joined Loew & Sons Co., a wholesale liquor business.
[4] The house is in the Swiss Chalet Revival style, as befitted Bomonti's ethnic heritage.
[5] The Bomonti House exemplifies the type of architecture preferred by this large and important ethnic group in Cleveland.
Martha "Fannie" Loew (née Bomonti), Frederick's sister, married into the Loew family and lived with Frederick Bomonti in the house after her husband died.