
(from Preservation Utah‘s home tour)
Built in 1948 by Pioneer Building Company (which dissolved two years later), this home is a WWII Era Cottage with Minimal Traditional style that combined elements of traditional styles like gables with the unadorned quality of Modernism. This home features a hipped roof (typically less expensive to construct than a standard roof), a circular window, attached garage, and a small portico (covered) entry.
The first owners of the home were Victor and Faye Guercio. Victor was born into an Italian immigrant family in Carbon County. He met Faye in Provo after the family moved there. After high school, he joined the Army Air Corps. His eyesight was not good enough to become a pilot, so he became an aircraft mechanic and served through World War II. Faye and Victor married in 1944 while Victor was stationed on an airbase in Texas.
The Guercios eventually raised four children in their house. Victor worked as a sheet metal worker and was active in the local metal workers’ union, advocating for improved health care and retirement benefits for workers. He loved his Italian heritage, including wine and Italian food. He took the family to the annual Italian Day at Lagoon, and he and Faye took several trips to Italy. He reportedly took great pride in his yard and meticulously kept it up.
Victor and Faye lived in the home for about 55 years. After Faye passed away in 2003, Victor moved to live with children.
1042 West Signora Drive in the Rose Park neighborhood of Salt Lake City, Utah





























