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  2. New England barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_England_barn

    The Pennsylvania barn has doors on the sidewall like the English barn but is a larger, bank barn with the cows housed in the basement, and has one or more distinctive forebays (cantilevered walls). The New World Dutch barn (Dutch barn) has similarities to the New England barn with the barn doors on the gable ends, but the Dutch barns are a much ...

  3. Dutch barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_barn

    The exterior features a broad gable roof, which, in early Dutch barns extended very low to the ground. The barns feature center doors for wagons on the narrow end. A pent roof, or a pentice, over the doors offered some protection from inclement weather. The siding was usually horizontal and had few details.

  4. Bert Leedy Round Barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bert_Leedy_Round_Barn

    The main doors of vertical wood planks slide along overhead tracks and are curved to conform to the circular form of the barn. A smaller door, located in the left sliding door, permits access without opening the larger entrance. There is another main level door on the east side of the barn, without a ramp. [4] The lower level, unlike the main ...

  5. Barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn

    The barns are typically the oldest and biggest buildings to be found on the farm. Many barns were converted into cow houses and fodder processing and storage buildings after the 1880s. Many barns had owl holes to allow for access by barn owls, encouraged to aid vermin control. The stable is typically the second-oldest building type on the farm.

  6. English barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_barn

    The swinging doors are typical but here they are a rare type called haar hung (they are suspended from one of the door stiles). The English barn , or three-bay barn , is a barn style that was most popular in the northeast region of the US, [ 1 ] but are the most widespread barn type in America.

  7. Hay hood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hay_hood

    To prevent small gaps around the closed doors at the beam penetration that would allow birds to enter the barn, one farmer in Reasnor, Iowa, designed a hay hood with a "bunker door" that when closed, was an angled floor on the hay hood, completely enclosing the hood and keeping birds such as sparrows and pigeons out of the barn. [5]

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