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The eaves may terminate in a fascia, a board running the length of the eaves under the tiles or roof sheets to cap off and protect the exposed rafter ends and to provide grounds on which to fix gutters.
During the previous Nara period (710–794), the structural elements of a roof were considered ornamental and therefore left exposed by design. The rafters supporting the roof's eaves would enter the building and would then be visible from below. [4] Above the rafters would be laid directly on the roofing material, for example wood shingles.
It features exposed rafters in open eaves, low-pitched gable roofs with wide overhangs, decorative gable beams, and a prominent front porch with tapered stone columns. Also on the property are the contributing carriage house (c. 1927) and garage (c. 1955).
It features a steeply pitched, cross gable roof with imbricated fish-scale asphalt shingles, brick interior slope chimneys, projecting eaves, and exposed rafters. Also on the property are a contributing barn (c. 1900) and stone retaining wall (1926).
[2] [3] In addition to its rock walls, the home features a gable roof with exposed rafters and wide eaves. The original roof was replaced after a 1921 storm. The house was the home of Charles Bower and his family from 1917 until 1922. [4] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 8, 1983. [2]
It is a single-story stone structure, built out of local fieldstone with cream-colored brick trim. Its gabled roof has extended eaves with exposed rafters in the Craftsman style. The house was built in 1946, its stonework done by the regionally prominent mason Silas Owens Sr. [2]
The Smith House is a historic house on Memphis Street in Wheatley, Arkansas.It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame structure, designed by Charles L. Thompson and built in 1919. It is the most architecturally significant building in the small community, exhibiting Craftsman style elements including exposed rafters, large brackets supporting extended eaves, and half-timbering on its gable ends.
The E. V. Cooke House is a historic house located northeast of Jerome, Idaho.The lava rock house was constructed in 1919 by stonemason H. T. Pugh.The bungalow-style home features a gable roof with exposed rafters, a gabled dormer with bracketed eaves, and a full porch.
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