Cherokee Lodge at 964 D Avenue in Coronado is a 1923 Spanish Colonial bungalow court converted to a four-unit vacation rental property two blocks east of Orange Avenue in the 92118 village residential grid. The D Avenue address sits in the center of Coronado's original cottage neighborhood, where early-twentieth-century residential architecture from the island's pre-bridge development era survives along tree-lined streets within walking distance of Hotel Del Coronado, the Orange Avenue commercial corridor, and Coronado Beach. The bungalow court format — individual detached or semi-detached cottages arranged around a shared garden courtyard — is a Southern California architectural type that Coronado preserves in higher concentration than most San Diego County communities, and Cherokee Lodge's 1923 construction places it in the same development period as much of the village's residential character. Units accommodate families and groups who prefer a cottage kitchen and private entrance over a hotel hallway, and the D Avenue location is a flat walk to Clayton's Coffee Shop on Orange Avenue — a Coronado breakfast and brunch institution — and the retail and dining corridor that stretches from the Coronado Ferry Landing south to the Hotel Del resort district. Coronado Beach access is four blocks west on any cross street, and the Glorietta Bay waterfront and Coronado Golf Course sit to the southeast. The Coronado Historical Association museum at 1100 Orange Avenue documents the island's architectural heritage, including the bungalow court style that Cherokee Lodge represents, through rotating exhibits and a permanent collection of more than 20,000 photographs dating to Coronado's 1886 founding era. Weekly and monthly rental terms serve families relocating to Coronado for military assignments at Naval Air Station North Island who need interim housing while waiting for base quarters or securing a long-term lease in the 92118 residential market.