Residential Home Styles
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Art Deco A vertically oriented design includes flat roofs and metal window casements. |
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Neoclassical Neoclassical homes exist in incarnations from one-story cottages to multilevel manses. |
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Bungalow A forerunner of the craftsman style, you'll find rustic exteriors and sheltered-feeling interiors. |
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Prairie Originated by Frank Lloyd Wright, this style can be house boxy or low-slung. |
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Cape Cod A true classic, Cape Cod homes have gabled roofs and unornamented fronts. |
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Pueblo Flat roofs, straight-edge window frames, and earth-colored walls typify Pueblos. |
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Colonial An offshoot of the Cape Cod style, it features a rectangular design and second-floor bedrooms. |
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Queen Anne Emerging in the Victorian era, the style features inventive floor plans and decorative chimneys. |
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Contemporary Unmistakably modern, this style has odd-sized windows and little ornamentation. |
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Ranch Ranch homes are set apart by pitched-roof construction, built-in garages, and picture windows. |
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Craftsman Full- or partial-width porches are framed by tapered columns and overhanging eaves. |
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Regency The style borrows the Georgian's classic lines, yet eschews ornamentation. |
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Creole A front wall recedes to form a first-story porch and a second-story balcony. |
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Saltbox Its sharply sloping gable roof resembles old-time boxes used for storing salt. |
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Dutch Colonial German settlers originated this style, which features a broad, barn-like roof. |
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Second Empire This Victorian style features mansard roofs with dormer windows. |
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Federal This style arose amid a renewed interest in Greek and Roman culture. |
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Shed A subset of the Modern style, Shed houses are asymmetric with sloping roofs. |
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French Provincial Balance and symmetry define the French Provincial style, which has a steep hip roof. |
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Shingle An American style that echoes Queen Anne, it has unadorned doors and large porches. |
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Georgian With paired chimneys and a decorative crown, this style was named after English royalty. |
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Shotgun Tradition says that a shotgun blast can trace a straight path from the front to back door. | | |
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Gothic Revival English romanticism influenced this style, marked by Gothic windows and vaulted roofs. |
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Spanish Eclectic This style has details from Moorish, Byzantine, Gothic, and Renaissance styles. |
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Greek Revival Entryway columns and a front door surrounded by rectangular windows are characteristic. |
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Split Level A Modern style, Split levels sequester living activities, such as sleeping and socializing. |
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International The International style exposes functional building elements, including elevator shafts. |
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Stick Decorative horizontal, vertical, or diagonal boards are typical of this Victorian style. |
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Italianate This style has symmetrical bay windows in front, small chimneys, and tall windows. |
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Tudor Tudors have half-timbering on bay windows and upper floors, and steep cross gables. |
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Monterey The Monterey style updates the New England Colonial style with an Adobe brick exterior. |
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Victorian Built during the rise of the machine age, Victorian architecture incorporated decorative details such as patterned shingles. |
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National Rooted in Native American dwellings, the National style is rectangular with side-gabled roofs. |
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