Thursday, October 8, 2015

Housing Styles

Housing Styles

Taylor Boraas hr-6

There are many different types of roofs that many people don't really notice when looking at a house.  The roof can contribute lots to your home, and can also add value when buying or selling the home.

Roof Styles:
1. Gable Roof- A Gable Roof is a roof with two sloping sides, forming a triangle at one or both ends.
2. Gambrel Roof- A roof with two angles of slope on each of two sides, the lower slope steeper than the upper slope.
3. Hip Roof- A Hipped Roof has all four sides sloping inward to meet at a peak, as here, or a ridge.
4. Saltbox Roof-A variation of the gable roof, originally created when a low lean-to addition was built onto the back wall of a house.
5. Mansard Roof- All four sides of this roof have two slopes, the lower four steeper than the upper four.
6. Shed roof- A simple, one-slope roof; also called a lean-to roof.
Housing Characteristics:
1. Bay Window- A set of two or more windows that protrude our from a wall.  The window is moved away from the wall to provide more light and wider views.
2. Casement Window- A window that opens by swinging inward or outward much like a door.  Casement windows are usually vertical in shape but are often grouped in bands.
3. Clapboard- Also known as weatherboard or siding.  Long, narrow boards overlapped to cover outer walls.  Used in Colonial style frame houses.
4. Dormer- The setting for a vertical window in the roof.  Called a gable dormer if it has its own gable or a shed dormer if a flat roof.  Most often found in upstairs bedrooms.
5. Eaves- That portion of the roof that projects beyond the wall.

6. Fanlight- A semicircular or arched window above a door.


7. Palladian Window- A three part window featuring a large arched center and flanking rectangular sidelights. 

8. Pediment- A triangular crown used over doors, windows, or porches.  A classical style.
9. Portico- A large porch usually with a pedimented roof supported by classical columns or pillars.

10. Rafter- A roof beam sloping from the ridge to the wall.  In most houses, rafters are visible only from the attic.  In styles such as craftsman bungalows and some "rustic" contemporaries, they are exposed.
11. Sidelights- Windows on either side of a door.
12. Turret- A small tower, often at the corner of a building.  Common in Queen Anne styles among others.  A turret is a small structure while a tower begins at ground level.
There are so many different features that can add a little history, or style to your home, and these are just a few!








No comments:

Post a Comment