
| Property Type: | INDUSTRIAL |
Land Sqft: 30,056
| Year Built: | 1961 |
Property Description:
For home based business owners, this is the house for you. Fexible M-SC/M-1 zoning, 1,641 square feet three bedrooms/two bath house with fireplace has new exterior/interior paint, formal living/dining,separate family room,new tile flooring, new kitchen with new appliances, new bathrooms, new lighting, new hardware, new doors and windows, all rooms are wired for fax/phone, CAT-5 wiring, new garage doors, house has been completely renovated! Home can easily be converted to an office! This is ideally for contractors/truckers/automotive/light industrial/manufacturing or any kind of business. Lot size is 30,056 square feet (.69 acres). Plenty of room to park your trucks, work vehicles, etc. Very private! Perfect for the home-based business owner because of the zoning!

Out of this context came the Cornelius Earle Rumsey Indian Collection which later became the Riverside Municipal Museum now known as the Riverside Metropolitan Museum (RMM). The Museum opened in the basement of City Hall on December 12, 1924, when the widow of National Biscuit Company (NABISCO) magnate Cornelius Earle Rumsey donated his collection of Native American artifacts to the City of Riverside. An ordinance, amending the City Charter and establishing a Municipal Museum, was adopted by the City Council on August 27, 1925. The current mission statement found in the city ordinance states that, "All collections and exhibits of the Museum shall generally reflect but shall not necessarily be limited to the specific interpretations of the history, natural history and anthropology of the City and County of Riverside and the immediate environs of southern California." From 1924 on, the collections have grown, typically through donations by prominent citizens and organizations, contributing to RMM holdings in the disciplines of local history, natural history, and anthropology. From 1925-48, the RMM was located in the basement of the old City Hall building on Riverside’s Seventh Street (now Mission Inn Avenue).
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