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The following
article is based upon material in American Bungalow Style,
an informative book by Robert Winter and photographer Alexander
Vertikoff. Winter, a member of the American Bungalow
magazine advisory board, and Vertikoff, the magazine's cover
and feature photographer, capture the charm and variety of
the nation's bungalows in great style.
Published
in cooperation with the magazine, and including a foreword
by publisher John Brinkmann, American Bungalow Style can
be ordered below. All photographs that appear in this article
are protected from reproduction by copyright ©1996 Alexander
Vertikoff.
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Architecture
is much more than style, but an important factor in
the construction of bungalows was their ability to meet owners'
functional requirements while giving them what had previously been
limited to the wealthy few: the latest in design.
Bungalows reflected
the whole range of architectural movements of their day, from Queen
Anne to Arts and Crafts, Tudor to Prairie and Pueblo, Spanish to
English Colonial Revival, and even Moderne. These styles share a
conscious search for the supposed simplicity of preindustrial times.
All were meant to counter the excess of the Victorian period by
returning to the past when handicrafts displayed the laborer's personal
involvement in the work. It is easy to see how the bungalow-whose
existence was defined on the grounds of restoring family values-fit
beautifully into the Arts and Crafts movement. It would bring style
to all the people whatever their economic or social status.
(1885-1905)
In the
United States, the Queen-Anne style's silhouette became asymmetrical,
picturesque, and highly decorative.
Features
include:
- clad
in clapboards or shingles
- a medium-pitched
roof (sometimes with one or two dormer windows)
- wraparound
porches
- balconies
- sculptured
brick chimneys
- art-glass
windows
- typical
Victorian rooms (living room/parlor merged)
- wallpapered
walls with picture molding beneath ceiling
- corner
tower giving distinction to living room
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(1900-1930)
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In
its day, the term "California bungalow" evoked both
a type-a one- or one-and-a-half-story dwelling-and an Arts and
Crafts architectural style that merged elements from Japanese
buildings and Swiss chalets. But as with the high-style Greene
and Greene houses, they don't necessarily all fit the type's
dictionary definition! |
(1900-1930)
Because
of the bungalow's strong early links to the state, the terms
"California Bungalow" or "California Craftsman"
were sometimes applied to many houses that might otherwise
be called Craftsman. The name comes from designs presented
in the artistic and popular Craftsman magazine, published
by Gustav Stickley from 1901-1916. Gradually, however, the
word took on its own momentum, going beyond any specific connections
to Stickley or his work, and it came to be freely used by
others as being characteristic of the period and associated
with classic bungalows wherever they may be throughout the
country.
Features
include:
- street-facing
gables with composition or shingled roofs
- painted
or stained brown or dark green (to merge with nature)
- wide
overhanging eaves
- the
sleeping porch
- front
door opens directly into the living room
- dark
wood paneling
- plastered
ceiling (sometimes crossed geometrically with wooden beams)
- always
a fireplace
- casement
windows
- arched
opening flanked with bookcases separates living room/dining
room
- bedrooms
with woodwork painted a light color
- kitchen
built-ins
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(1890-1915)
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The Mission
phenomenon of the Arts and Crafts movement was not limited
to California, Florida and the Southwest, but it was used
most often in states with a Spanish past.
Features
include:
- tile
roofs
- vaguely
Moorish towers
- round
arches recalling a mission cloister
- plain
but functional interiors
- fireplace
- some
art glass
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(1890-1930)
The actual
connecting link between the English Arts and Crafts movement
and the new American home architecture at the dawning of the
20th century was Tudor-style architecture. Tudor Revival has
several stylistic variants, including English, Elizabethan,
Jacobean, Norman, Old Country Farm, Cottage-style, Manor House
and related picturesque styles.
Features
include:
- steeply
pitched roof, usually side-gabled (may be parapet or false
thatched)
- wall
cladding (stucco, brick, stone or wood)
- tall,
narrow windows (commonly in groups with multipane glazing)
- large,
elaborate chimneys (commonly crowned with decorative pots)
- decorative
half-timbering
- detailed
doorways
- recognizably
French-featured interiors
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(1900-1920)
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This
is one of the few indigenous American styles. It was
developed by an unusually creative group of Chicago
architects that have come to be known as the Prairie
School. Frank Lloyd Wright's early work, inspired by
the linearity of Japanese prints, is in this style and
he is the acknowledged master of the Prairie house.
Features
include:
- low-pitched
roofs, usually hipped or gabled, with widely overhanging
eaves
- two
stories, with one-story wings or porches
- massive
square or rectangular piers of masonry used to support
porch roofs
- rows
of casement windows
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window boxes or flattened pedestal urns for flowers
- broad,
flat chimneys
- contrasting
wall materials or trim, emphasizing second story
- decorative
friezes or door surrounds with floral ornamentation
- Wright's
famous furnishings and flowing interiors
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(1900-1930s)
A close
relative of the Prairie School, the Foursquare (or Box House)
is probably one of the most popular styles of houses in America.
Its practicality cannot be overstated. Despite their basic,
simple cube design, Foursquares were not bogged down in a
sameness of exterior design or decor. They offer a large variety
of appearances, and their form can be seen from coast to coast,
from plain to fancy. Indeed, they are the quintessential home
of the period.
Features
include:
- cubish
shape
- two
full stories
- hipped
roof and front roof dormer
- front
porch (ranging from wraparounds to simple stoops)
- windows
usually grouped in pairs
- usually
four bedrooms
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(1915-1930) Period
revival styles-such as Spanish, pueblo, log and colonial-are usually
thought of as projections of the 1920s, but each had its roots in
the recent as well as the distant past. The eclecticism of previous
revivals was dropped in favor of the authentic recasting of historic
styles. Interiors reflected newly informal lifestyles with more open
plans and flowing spaces.
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Building
on the interest in America's missions, a number of architects
went beyond the Hispanic architecture in the United States
to draw imagery from Mexico and Spain itself, especially
from domestic architecture. In doing so they opened a new
architectural vocabulary, called Plateresque and Churrigueresque.
The high art of this style had to be watered down in its
application to the bungalow.
Not many baroque doorways appeared on these small houses.
The better-than-average Spanish Colonial Revival bungalow,
however, did have some endearing ornaments.
Features
include:
- red
tile roof
- canvas
draperies pulled across large, round-arched windows
- awnings
supported by spears over doorways
-
light-bathed interiors (thanks to large windows and white
or rosy pink walls)
- black
iron balustrades and curtain rods with wooden rings
- an
abundance of tile on staircases and in bathrooms and kitchens
- Spanish
fireplace
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Drawing
from local historical precedents for inspiration, the Pueblo
Revival style is a mixture of both the flat-roofed Spanish
Colonial buildings and the Native American pueblos.
Features
include:
- flat
roof with parapeted wall above
- stucco
wall, usually earth-colored
- projecting
wooden roof beams (vigas) extending through walls
- wall
and roof parapet with irregular rounded edges
- window
lintels
- porch
supports
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The
revival of log cabins coexisted with the rise of rustic
lodges and distinctive national park architecture (Parkitecture),
both outgrowths of the Arts and Crafts movement, and both
expressing a need to get back to nature. Log cabin bungalows,
however, are extremely rare but fun to watch for. Even Gustav
Stickley, the chief promoter of Arts and Crafts ideas in
the United States, used logs for Craftsman Farms in New
Jersey-making sure that his own bungalow appeared to commune
properly with nature.
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At the
turn of the century, the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris sent
the message that architecture is essentially bilateral symmetry
and that style must be classically inspired. Translated
into the language of bungalow designers, this meant the
use of Georgian- or Federal-style models from the 18th century,
which produced the Colonial Revival.
Features
include:
- miniature
temple fronts
- windows
in bands
- perhaps
French doors
-
white woodwork interiors
- dashes
of classical detail
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(1920-1930)
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The unique
new bungalow that developed in Chicago in the 1920s was fueled
by the national bungalow craze and Chicago's own Prairie style-but
much of its roots came from the workingman's house of the
19th and early 20th century. The result was the cottage transformed,
and a bountiful harvest of Chicago bungalow neighborhoods-just
right for Chicago families today.
Features
include:
- all
brick (in an assortment of shades)
- three
levels of living space
- elbow
to elbow with the neighboring house
- 20
first-floor windows
- leaded
or stained glass
- generous
use of wood and ceramic tile
- tile
roofs
- artful,
multipaned doors and doorways
- expansive
interior with all the Craftsman delights
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(1930-1940)
The
house of almost universal appeal-literally millions still dot
the national landscape. The design took its inspiration from
both early Massachusetts and, with roof dormers, Colonial Virginia.
There were thus two styles of this small one-story house, the
Cape Cod and the dormered Williamsburg.
Features
include:
- usually
center doorway on a three- or five-bay facade
- Southern-style
sidewall chimney
- absence
of a front porch (usually just a stoop)
- window
shutters and flower boxes
- possible
bay window
Williamsburg specific features:
- side-gable
plan
- one-and-a-half
stories
- colonial-style
roof dormers
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usually clapboard-sided, but also sheathed with shingles
or built of brick
- rear-roof
shed dormers on large models
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(1930-1940)
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Art Deco
may have been too high style to be used for the modest bungalow,
but in the 1930s quite a few bungalows were designed in what
is now called Streamline Moderne.
Features
include:
- curved
corners (providing a sense of motion)
- occasionally
portholes and bulkheads
- concrete
and stucco material (often painted in pastels)
- glass
brick (especially around entrances)
- terra-cotta
ornaments
- light,
airy interiors with simple modern touches
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Adapted from
American Bungalow Style by Robert Winter and Alexander Vertikoff.
Published by Simon and Schuster in cooperation with American Bungalow
magazine, 1996.
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