Victorian. Modern. Colonial. What’s Your Architectural Style?

Written by Neda Dabestani-Ryba


Victorian. Modern. Colonial. What’s Your Architectural Style?

By Neda Dabestani-Ryba Prudential Carruthers REALTORS

You are attracted to a home for more than its number of bedrooms and square footage. Whether consciously or subconsciously, you are drawn torepparttar individual character of a home. Part of what makes up that character is its architecture style. During various periods of our history, different architectural styles were prevalent with builders. If you were to take a home tour around town, you can get a feel for when different neighborhoods were built based onrepparttar 150438 architecture ofrepparttar 150439 homes. Today, many new homes incorporate different aspects of these styles onrepparttar 150440 exterior and interior. The Queen Anne, Gothic Revival and Empire homes are all variations ofrepparttar 150441 Victorian style. Popularized afterrepparttar 150442 Civil War, these homes were most popular inrepparttar 150443 South and West. With its intricate shapes, elaborate trimming, and fish-scale shingles, these homes truly reflectrepparttar 150444 Victorian age. Inside,repparttar 150445 homes are finely detailed with stained glass windows, elaborate trim and molding, and side-by-side entry doors. Other common elements are wraparound porches and bay windows. Greek Revival-style homes were built during 1820-1850. Many of its elements representrepparttar 150446 style of Greek Temples with columns, gable or double-sloping roofs, and pediments over windows and doors. The windows are usually square and rectangular with fan windows overrepparttar 150447 entryways. The interiors are symmetrical as well, with detailed woodwork and baseboards. Colonial homes take onrepparttar 150448 simplistic style ofrepparttar 150449 original homes of settlers torepparttar 150450 United States. Common to this style arerepparttar 150451 steep roofs with gable ends, clapboard siding and small windows onrepparttar 150452 outside and wainscoting and chair rails onrepparttar 150453 inside. A popular variation ofrepparttar 150454 Colonial-style isrepparttar 150455 Cape Cod, which is usually 1 ½-stories withrepparttar 150456 front door inrepparttar 150457 center and two gable (triangular structure) ends. If you've ever seen a photo ofrepparttar 150458 White House, then you are familiar withrepparttar 150459 Georgian style home. Built duringrepparttar 150460 period of 1715-1790,repparttar 150461 homes were inspired by English pattern books and reflectedrepparttar 150462 wealth ofrepparttar 150463 owner. Insiderepparttar 150464 home, you could find large, ornate cornices and trim incorporating leaves and shells. The exterior is marked with medium pitched roofs with minimal overhang. The front door is centered with a decorative crown overhead and flanked by flattened columns. There are numerous windows with nine or twelve panes in each.

GREEN BUILDING MEDIA FACT SHEET Past, Present & Future

Written by Neda Dabestani-Ryba


GREEN BUILDING MEDIA FACT SHEET Past, Present & Future

By Neda Dabestani-Ryba Prudential Carruthers REALTORS

Past Specialized, niche home builders began constructing resource-efficient, environmentally sensitive homes inrepparttar early 1970s. The home building industry coinedrepparttar 150437 phrase “green building” inrepparttar 150438 late 1980s/early 1990s, turning a movement into a quiet revolution. The first official green home building program began in 1991 inrepparttar 150439 city of Austin, Texas. The Home Builders Association of Metropolitan Denver introducedrepparttar 150440 first HBA-owned green building program in 1995. Overrepparttar 150441 years, Built Green® Colorado has becomerepparttar 150442 largest green building program inrepparttar 150443 nation, with more than 100 builder members acrossrepparttar 150444 state. Present Today, new homes are twice as energy-efficient as they were 30 years ago, thanks to cutting-edge green building techniques and technologies available for new and remodeled homes. Nationwide, roughly 61,000 homes were built using local green building program guidelines from 1990-2004. In 2004 alone, more than 14,000 green homes were constructed. NAHB recently introduced voluntary Model Green Home Building Guidelines (www.nahb.org/gbg) to bring environmentally-friendly building techniques to mainstream builders and home builders associations. The guidelines offer builder and market-driven solutions in seven areas, including lot preparation and design, resource efficiency, energy efficiency, water efficiency and conservation, occupancy comfort and indoor environmental quality, and operation maintenance and homeowner education. More specifically, homes built today use a myriad of green building techniques and technologies that

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