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Fairglen Addition with double-car garage and entry. The residences have expansive 50 ft (15 m)-wide open floor plans, designed to enhance privacy and seamlessly blend indoor and outdoor living spaces. Their modest facades typically incorporate integrated fencing and garages facing the street.
The roof of the main section is hipped, and three large intersecting gables are over the three additions. A modern garage and breezeway was added in the early 2000s. [2] Garage: The garage is a two-story, modified Stick Style structure. It served as a garage as well as an office, staff housing, and power plant. The building was construed in ...
The NRHP nomination also includes the home's two-car garage. The gabled garage matches the architectural style of the bungalow, with Onduline roofing and matching siding. The interior is paneled in bead board. [4]
Dutch gable, gablet: A hybrid of hipped and gable with the gable (wall) at the top and hipped lower down; i.e. the opposite arrangement to the half-hipped roof. Overhanging eaves forming shelter around the building are a consequence where the gable wall is in line with the other walls of the buildings; i.e., unless the upper gable is recessed.
In plan it is L-shaped, and gable roofs project along each wing. A part of the roof on the shorter wing has been extended to cover a strong room made with concrete walls and a steel door. The walls are clad in weatherboards and the windows are predominantly timber double-hung sashes with two lights in each sash.
Plans dated 1928 but with later 1930s notations show a platform building, goods shed, carriage shed (north of the station masters house), coal stage and engine shed (the coal stage marked on the plans as being removed in 1936), These plans are also annotated "Trucking yards removed and land sold to the Nowra Dairy Coy 7.7.1938".
[3] The station is three-part in plan with a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, white-painted brick central block and two single story weatherboarded wings on the north and south. The central block is five bays wide beneath a steeply pitched, end gable, slate roof. There are shed-roof dormers on the east and west sides of the roof, and one interior brick chimney.
Previously, it has been shown that the limit state design/load and resistance factor design (LRFD) and permissible stress design/allowable strength design (ASD) can produce significantly different designs of steel gable frames. [3] There are few situations where ASD produces significantly lighter weight steel gable frame designs.