The Rowhouses at 702-712 Kirkwood Boulevard is a historic building located on the east side of Davenport, Iowa, United States.
The Tudor Revival structure has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1984.
The heads of household of the four families were Bela Nagy, who worked as a draughtsman at Davenport Machine & Foundry; Albert Katz, who was the vice president of the Why Clothing Company; Rufus Scott, who worked for the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad; and Norman Godfrey, who was the secretary of the Mississippi River Sash & Door Association.
Although they were larger and had more entrances, rowhouses and duplexes built in the 19th-century generally resembled single-family homes.
This rowhouse returned to the earlier practice of building multi-family housing that resembled a single-family dwelling.