ma ceu architecture
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Architecture - RE14R07 Massachusetts Continuing Education Course – 2 Credits. Discover the many varied and historical architectural styles and construction methods that were built here in New England. Join us as we explore the science and art of structural design.TRANSCRIPT
ArchitectureRE14R07
Jody OBrien
If you’ve ever had buyers turn up their noses at a house before they even got out of the car, you understand that architecture matters
The Basics
Our Story Begins
First Period• 1625–1725
• adaptations of English domestic buildings.
• Generally one room deep and two stories high
• single large, central chimneys,
• steeply pitched roofs and
Benjamin Abbott House 1685
Georgian• 1725–1780
• simple, symmetrical, two-room deep boxes
• side gable, gambrel, or hipped roof.
• central chimneys
• sided with wood shingles or clapboards.
• Windows, always symmetrically spaced, were
double-hung with nine or twelve lights (panes) per
sash
Pillsbury French House1790’s
Jonathan Swift House1785
Federal• late 1700s and coincided with a reawakening of
interest in classical Greek and Roman culture.
• add swags, garlands, elliptical windows, and other decorative details to rectangular Georgian houses.
• more delicate and more formal.
• arched Palladian window on the second story above the front door.
• The front door usually has sidelights and a semicircular fanlight.
Federal
Greek Revival1830‐1840
• based on the architecture of classic Greek temples
• wide band of trim below the cornice, representing the
classical entablature
• pilasters or paneled trim at the building corners
• flat-roofed entry porches supported by round or square
columns
Greek Revival
Picturesque Styles
Italianate
Famous example: The Breakers, Newport, R.I.Square and symmetrical. Brackets or other ornamentation just below the roof. Regular windows with larger panes often topped by a squared arch. Later, square towers were added. Popular in the 1850s to 1880s.Photo courtesy of: Patrick O’Connor/ The Preservation Society of Newport County
What do they look like today
• Now commercial• Your Office?
• Now condos
Gothic/Gothic Revival• less popular • Steeply pitched roofs• cross gables, and lacy vergeboards• symmetrical with a central cross gable and a one-
story porch• hood molds over pointed arched or rectangular
windows and doors, towers, and bay windows.
Arden/Woods Estate
Victorian/Queen Anne1850‐1900
Famous example: Carson Mansion, Eureka, Calif.Round or square towers and turrets. Stone foundations topped by brick. Ornately carved and painted wood trim. Spindle railing on porches. Popular from the 1850s until around 1900.Photo courtesy of: Ron Kuhnel/The Eureka Heritage Society
Falmouth, MA –Monument Beach
$995,000
P. F Sullivan House Lowell Ma $429,000
1900’s to Today
Tudor
This architecture style was popular in the 1920s and 1930s and continues to be a mainstay in suburbs across the United States. The defining characteristics are half-timbering on bay windows and upper floors, and facades that are dominated by one or more steeply pitched cross gables. Patterned brick or stone walls are common, as are rounded doorways, multi-paned casement windows, and large stone chimneys. A subtype of the Tudor Revival style is the Cotswold Cottage. With a sloping roof and a massive chimney at the front, a Cotswold Cottage may remind you of a picturesque storybook home.
The Bricks
Cape Cod
Some of the first houses built in the United States were Cape Cods. The original colonial Cape Cod homes were shingle-sided, one-story cottages with no dormers. During the mid-20th century, the small, uncomplicated Cape Cod shape became popular in suburban developments. A 20th-century Cape Cod is square or rectangular with one or one-and-a-half stories and steeply pitched, gabled roofs. It may have dormers and shutters.
Craftsman/Bungalow• Starts in California• Follows the Arts and Craft movement• Uses natural material• Widely disseminated through pattern books and
magazines• the most prevalent style for small houses in the
nation • One and 1½ story Craftsman style houses are
popularly known as bungalows
Sears Kit Homes• Sold about 75,000• 1908-1940• 447 Patterns
• How to tell if it is a Sears Kit Home
French Provincial
Famous example: The Biltmore, Asheville, N.C.High, sloping mansard roofs (a type of hip roof). Rounded arches over windows and porch. Multipane symmetrical windows, often breaking out of the second story. Patterned after French chateaus under the reign of Louis XIV, the style had several revivals.• Photo courtesy of: The Biltmore Asheville, N.C.
Jody O’BrienThe RE/Education Company
Committed to Professionalism in Real Estate through Education
Blogwww.reeducator.wordpress.com
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