U.S. Home Architecture: Classic Houses
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic house tout
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Class 1
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 2
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic house 3
Illustration Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 4
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 5
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 6
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 7
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 8
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 9
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 10
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 11
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 12
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 13
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 14
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 15
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 16
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 17
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic houses 18
Illustration: Tom Hennessy
Classic House 19
Illustration: Tom Hennessy

DUTCH COLONIAL
Time: 1650-1710. Place: New York's Hudson Valley, New Jersey.
The gambrel roof built by Dutch settlers provided extra attic space.

SALTBOX
Time: 1670-1780. Place: New England.
The distinctive catslide roof sloughed off heavy snows and rain.

CAPE COD
Time: 1710-1850 Place: New England.
Abundant timber encouraged the expansion of a traditional one-room English cottage.

GEORGIAN
Time: 1720-1780. Place: East Coast to South
Builders copied from carpenter's manuals the classical designs favored in England.

FEDERAL
Time: 1780-1820 Place: East Coast to Midwest.
After the Revolution, Americans gave the Georgian style a simpler look.

GREEK REVIVAL
Time: 1825-1860. Place: East Coast.
Pride in democracy, first espoused by the Greeks, led to the popularity of ancient forms.

ITALIANATE
Time: 1840-1885 Place: Midwest.
Pattern books promoted this picturesque, informal design, a change from the classical trends.

SECOND EMPIRE
Time: 1855-1885 Place: Northeast to Midwest.
The French mansard roof gained the world's attention at exposition in Paris.

QUEEN ANNE
Time: 1880-1910 Place: All areas, especially the South and West.
This ornate style is what people most often refer to as "Victorian."

SHINGLE
Time: 1880-1900 Place: Seaside New England.
Today's architects have revived this hybrid of Colonial Revival and Queen Anne.

COLONIAL REVIVAL
Time: 1880-1955 Place: All areas.
The Centennial celebration of 1876 popularized the house forms of the country's founding days.

TUDOR REVIVAL
Time: 1890-1940 Place: All areas.
An asymetrical, English-manor look to counter its boxy Colonial Revival neighbors in suburbia.

PRAIRIE
Time: 1900-1920 Place: Midwest.
Low-slung designs by Frank Lloyd Wright and others echoed flat prairie landscapes.

CRAFTSMAN
Time: 1905-1930 Place: All areas.
The Arts and Crafts movement embodied simplicity, handiwork, and natural materials.

SPANISH REVIVAL
Time: 1915-1945 Place: California, Florida, Southwest
Romantic revivals celebrated Mediterranean and native heritages.

RANCH
Time: 1935-1975 Place: All areas.
California architect Cliff May's vision of Spanish ranches was simplified by suburban builders.

INTERNATIONAL
Time: 1930s-1990s Place: California, Northeast.
The unadorned geometry, too austere for housing, influenced public buildings.

POST-MODERN
Time: 1970s-present Place: All areas
An attempt to make modernist design more human by incorporating historic references.

Advertisement

On Newsstands Now

In the Magazine
September 2008 - Kitchen & Bath Issue
kitchen painted red wooden sink butcher block counter installation bath faucet recently remodeled bath bath vanity
Advertisement

American domestic architecture came into its own in the 20th century. Architects like Frank Lloyd Wright, Greene & Greene, and Philip Johnson created true homegrown styles. But an equally important development never showed up on a blueprint — the preservation movement. Laws now protect the finest period neighborhoods, owners of old houses maintain their original facades even as they update interiors, and architects turn to the past for inspiration.

This desire to hold on to the 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries ensures that future generations will experience American history in its most intimate form: the homes we lived in. From the simple log cabin brought over by Swedish settlers in the late 1600s to the sophisticated geometry of 20th-century modernists, the rich variety of homes reflects the melting pot of people and cultural influences that have shaped this country. "Each one of us has an ancestry, we have a genealogy — and so do houses," says John Milnes Baker, author of American House Styles. Next, a timeline of our architectural history.

Page:  123456 Next
Article: Colonial Revival Architecture
Sign Up for Our Free Newsletters

Comments

Post a Comment