Address: 4622 Keswick Road, Baltimore 21210

List price: $1,050,000

Year built: 1894

Real estate agent: Gary Gestson

Last sold price/date: For $485,000 on Aug. 29, 2019

Property size: 3,241-square-foot home has three bedrooms and two full bathrooms on .14 acres.

Unique features: For 76 years, the brown-shingled building in Roland Park welcomed worshippers as the Evergreen Methodist Protestant Church. Because of declining attendance in later years, the church merged with the Roland Avenue Methodist Church and the building was converted into a private residence in 1971.

Even today, the home is filled with original stained glass windows in shades of amethyst and cranberry and green. The bell in the steeple still rings, and a concrete exterior wall still reads “Evergreen MP Church.”

The inside of the house still looks very much like a church, with soaring, vaulted 20-foot ceilings and original hardwood floors. The main room has what appears to be an original wooden wall carving, and there is a wood-burning fireplace with an elaborate mantel.

There’s an open floor plan, a skylight and a loft bedroom.

The kitchen on the main floor and the bathrooms have been modernized. The former has white granite countertops and stainless steel appliances, while the bathroom features both a clawfoot soaking tub and a walk-in shower. This home has been updated with central air conditioning — unusual for a 19th century residence.

Outside is a small, fenced-in courtyard. The alley leading to one door is paved and provides access for off-street parking.

This home for decades was the residence and studio of the artist Tylden Streett. His sculptures can be found throughout the region and include the Firefighter Memorial statue at Baltimore City Hall Plaza, the stone gargoyles on the National Cathedral in Washington and the seal on the Embassy of the State of Kuwait in Washington.