Shed 1-2 stories The Shed style represents a new development in U.S. architecture from the 1960s. It is often characterized by multi-directional roofs. Walls are usually covered with board siding, applied horizontally, vertically, or even diagonally.
Shed: Shed dormers are found, for example, in Arts & Crafts, Colonial Revival styles Arched: Arched top dormers are found, for example, in Second Empire, Beaux Arts Classical styles ...
Shed Dormers- a full-width dormer with a single roof sloping in one direction. Clapboard- a house covering made of overlapping boards. Fascia- a vertical board nailed onto the ends of the rafters.
shed a dormer with a flat roof that slopes down from the roof attachment to the front. sheesh mahal ...
shed roof - Roof consists of one inclined plane side light - Usually a long, fixed sash found in pairs along side a window or door ...
Shed A lean-to roof; also the room created by the lean-to. Sill The heavy timber on the foundation of a building. Also the bottom crosspiece of a window frame.
Shed - A roof type with one high pitched plane covering the entire structure. Shingles - Wood, asphalt, or other material that is applied in small sections as an outside covering on roofs of exterior walls to convey the run off of water.
shed dormer A dormer window covered by a single roof slope without a gable. shingle A unit composed of wood, cement, asphalt compound, slate, tile or the like, employed in an overlapping series to cover roofs and walls.
Shed -A roof type with one high pitched plane covering the entire structure. Shingle A unit composed of wood, cement, asphalt compound, slate, tile or the like, employed in an overlapping series to cover roofs and walls.
2. A shed or sloping roof attached to the side of a building or wall. 3. Sports The sloping roof that rises from the inner wall to the outer wall surrounding three sides of the court in court tennis, off which the ball is served.
Penthouse - A shed or lean to projecting from or adjoining the main building. Pentroof - A roof with the slope on one side only. Pergola - A structure with climbing plants along the walk.
In the evolution of Gothic architecture, the progressive enlargement of the windows was not intended to shed more light into the interiors, but rather to provide an ever-increasing area for the stained glass.
Shed dormers Flared eaves Full-width one-story porch Dutch Colonial house plans are usually identified as one stories (sometimes 1 1/2 and 2 stories) with gabled or gambreled roof with little or no overhang.
Green bricks - are newly cast, wet but firm bricks, which are put into a drying shed or hack to harden up before being transferred to the kiln. Header - a brick laid so that only its end appears on the face of the wall.
Using never-before-seen footage, the film attempts to shed light on the Nazis obsession with concepts of order and stability borrowed from ancient Greece and Rome.
Or, in architecture, the slope on a buttress to shed rainwater. wildernessA Wilderness is a wood, kept for pleasure, with walks.
PENT ROOF A narrow shed style roof placed above the first floor of a building to protect the doors, windows and lower walls, often covering all four sides of the building. PILAR A support column without classical detailing.
Let our eyes shed tears without end amid the joys that are promised to us. Let us rejoice over what has already been wrought among the faithful, for but yesterday they were fighting for Christ, and today thei reign with him.
Coping is a capping at the top of a wall, serving to shed water. Cornice A Cornice is a decorative element made up of molded members usually placed at or near the top of an exterior or interior wall.
The pink-interiored garage is now gone, and a new one built; our gardens are flourishing, we have added a small barn, chicken shed, and a "Potting Shed" for me! It's been an experience! Thanks! ~Jean from South Dakota ...
Roof Types Gable, Hipped, Mansard, Shed, Saltbox, Pyramidal, Gambrel, Flat Shingles Chisel, Diamond, Fishscale, Octagon, Sawtooth, Square Butt ...
RAINCAP: feature over an opening such as a window or door, a wide trim developed to shed water away from the opening. Can be heavy and decorated or light and plain. (IMAGE) RETURN: the part of a pattern that continues around a corner. (IMAGE) ...
Separate dormer windows or a shed dormer with a series of windows were incorporated into the gambrel roof. Some also included a rear cross gambrel design. The main roof line may feature a full-width porch or and added porch with a separate roof.
Ranch Floor Plans Saltbox Floor Plans Shed Style Floor Plans Shingle Style Floor Plans Southern Floor Plans Split Level Floor Plans Tidewater Floor Plans Tudor Floor Plans Victorian Floor Plans ...
lean-to - a small building added to another building, usually covered by a sloping (or shed) roof light (lite) - small panes of window set into an individual sash ...
In the time of Umar a mosque is known to have been built on the site although it appears to have been a semipermanent structure made out of re-used material, hastily put together to form a covered prayer area with a shed roof.
Sill - A horizontal timber member at the bottom of the frame of a window or door, on the external face to shed water. A masonry sill projects beyond the pane of the wall, below the timber sill. (also: cill).
Usually has a lancet window and vergeboard scroll sawn decor. (used in Gothic domestic architecture). Gabled or hipped - roof windows that are gabled or hipped. Shed - a dormer with a flat roof that slopes down from the roof attachment to ...
See also: Architecture, House, Floor, Door, Gable
 
|