
Cape Cod Colonial

- Traditionally, exterior walls were white clapboard, natural shingles or brick; modern versions have exterior walls made of a wide variety of materials
- Simple double-hung windows
- Shutters the same length as the windows
- Simple cornice with gutters immediately above the first-floor windows
- Easy to build, maintain and heat
- Inherent in the design is the necessity to walk through one room to reach another

Dutch Colonial

- Central entrance
- Dutch entrance door
- Double-hung windows with small panes of glass
- Exterior may be made of a wide variety of materials, such as clapboard, shingles, cut stone, brick or stucco
- Second-story dormers through the roof are common
- Chimney rarely in the center

French Normandy

- 1 ½ to 2 ½ stories
- Exterior walls usually are brick, stone or stucco
- Asymmetrical shape
- Large chimneys
- High, complicated roofs
- Half timbers for decoration

Masonry Tudor or Jacobsen

- Usually 2 ½ stories
- Stone or cement window mullions and transoms
- Casement windows with leaded glass (often diamond-shaped)
- High, prominent chimneys with protruding chimney pots
- Semi-hexagonal bays and turrets
- Interior often laid out with odd-shaped rooms full of nooks and crannies, large fireplaces, beamed ceilings and rough plaster walls

California Ranch

Sliding glass doors leading onto the patios History The ranch house of the West has spread in popularity throughout the United States. Today, the term is commonly used to describe a wide variety of 1-story houses, including many smaller ones that used to be called Bungalows.

French Provincial

- French windows or shutters on the first floor
- Two symmetrical 1-story wings
- Usually made of brick

New England Colonial

- Originals had chimneys at each end for heating
- Modern versions have only one chimney at the end or in the center
- Window are the double-hung type with small glass panes
- Shutters the same size as the window
- Central entrance door often has sidelights and a fanlight
- Elaborate cornice with dentils
- First floor has a central hallway running from the front to the rear
- Bedrooms are on the second floor

Cotswold

- Walls of the originals were built of materials of the area - brick, stone, wood siding, half timbers
- Steep gable roof with complex lines
- Casement windows
- Dormer windows smaller than the other windows
- Rooms tend to be small and irregularly shaped
- Layout often necessitates walking through one room to get to another (even the bedroom)
- Upper-story bedrooms have steep walls and need dormers

Front Gable, New England Colonial, Charlestone Colonial, or English Colonial

- House and wing have gable roofs
- Basic house usually is clapboard
- Wing front often is cut stone
- Cornice on the front or on all four sides
- Double-hung windows with small panes of glass
- Shutters the same size as the windows
- Central entrance in the front wing has a sidelight and fanlight
- Wing has stone columns on four corners
- Central hallway runs from the wing to the rear of the house
- Bedrooms on the second floor

Queen Anne

- Half timbering
- Windows of various forms
- Upper stories that project over the lower ones
- Bay windows
- Turrets
- Big chimneys

Greek Revival

- Windows are small and hidden for they are not part of the Greek temple architecture
- Interior design is sacrificed for the exterior design

Regency

- Almost always brick, often painted white
- One chimney on the side
- Double-hung windows
- Shutters the same size as the windows
- A simple informal style without the classic lines of the Georgian

Elizabethan (or half timber)

- Massive sculptured chimneys
- Used brick between half timers is called “nogging”; when not covered with stucco, it is “exposed nogging”
- Complicated high peaked roofs that are expensive to install and subject to leaks because of complex valleys
- Small, leaded-glass casement windows
- Interior often has large halls and a spacious living room with a large fireplace and beamed ceilings
- Bedrooms are on the second floor

International

- Flat roofs
- Smooth, uniform wall surfaces
- Windows that turn the corner of the house

Southern Colonial

- Hip or gable roof covered with shingles
- Symmetrical
- Second-story balcony
- Balustrade
- Belvedere
- Double-hung windows with small panes of glass
- Shutters are the same size as the windows
- Cornices with dentils

Salt Box Colonial

- Exterior walls usually are clapboard or shingles
- Large central chimney
- Large double-hung windows with small panes of glass
- No windows in the rear
- Shutters the same size as the windows
- To obtain the traditional lean-to look, headroom in the rear must be sacrificed.

Williamsburg Georgian

- Sliding double-hung windows with small panes
- Simple front entrances