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The house is in mottled brick, with boxed eaves and a pyramidal pantile roof. There are two storeys and two bays. The doorway has pilasters, a radial fanlight and a cornice, and to the left is a round-arched passage doorway. The windows are sashes with painted wedge lintels. [11] II: St Andrew's Church, East Heslerton
It is two-story wood-frame structure, with a shallow pitch hip roof sporting broad boxed eaves, and a wraparound single-story porch. The porch supports are fine examples of period scrollwork and bracketing. The interior of the house retains many original period features, including flooring, fireplaces, and trim.
Wildfell is a simplified Federal style, with a molding over the boxed eaves, which is repeated on the porch above its octagonal pillars. The six-paneled front door in a plain frame is topped by a four-light transom.
It has boxed eaves, with full gable returns and raking molding. It occupies a corner lot; its gable front faces southeast onto W. Montana St.; its southwest side is along 7th Ave. The southwest side has have two dormers breaking the roofline, and another dormer faces southeast from the wing which extends to the northeast. A c. 1945 wood-frame ...
It is a single-story wood frame structure, with a gabled metal roof and clapboarded exterior. The boxed eaves with plain frieze below are suggestive of the Greek Revival style. The main facade has a pair of sash windows flanking the main entrance, which is sheltered by a gabled hood. [2]
This is Colonial Revival Style house. The house is wood framed with the characteristic square plans and shingled, pyramidal roof with dormers and boxed eaves. [6] Listed in the National Register of Historic Places on March 11, 1994, reference: #94000076. [6] The Smith-Beck House – built in 1899 and located at 425 Huachuca St.
The Frame Cottage is a historic house located at 183 Prospect St. in Tonopah, Nevada.The wood-frame home was built c. 1909. The house features a gable roof with pediment-like gables, a porch with a pediment, classically influenced boxed eaves, and a symmetrical, T-shaped design.
The Burckhardt House is unique in Lincoln architecture because of its Prairie Box/American Foursquare style. [1] The house follows a simple, rectangular plan, and features a cross gabled roof with return box eaves on the south facing front gable, a shed roofed dormer on the west side, and a hip roof porch on the front facade. [1]