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It's not a very appealing
name, Classic Box, but it certainly is descriptive.
A two-story structure, resembling a Kinney
shoebox in shape and a roman temple in detail,
this style is typical to West Coast cities
which experienced a burst of population growth
at the turn of the century--Seattle, Portland
and Oakland. Don't think of the "box"
as an uni-maginative geometric shape. Consider
it, instead, a creative response to site constraints
and fashionable trends. The Classic Box pulled
in its wings in contrast to the spread eagle
posture of the Queen
Anne. The parts of
the house were retracted into an orderly package,
with flush planes, flattened or-namentation,
and few protruding parts. Even bay windows,
when they exist on the side or front, are
compressed, a broad angle minimizing the distance
of the projection.
At the same time, the
rectangular layout recalled the floor plan
of the colonists' homes they had set out to
imitate. The earliest settlers in the 17th
century had designed the first American dwellings
no more than one room deep under the main
roof. The more sophisticated Colonial style
which soon followed, and persisted as the
most common style in the 18th century, was
just as wide, but twice as deep. Called "double-pile,"
this floor plan consisted of two rows of rooms,
broadside facing front. Reinterpreted a hundred
years later in Oakland, the long narrow lots
demanded that the double-pile plan be reoriented,
with the short end addressing the street instead.
Typically, the front door
is on one side, leading to a foyer devoted
to a "U" or "L" shaped
staircase sporting two knobbed railing balusters
per step. The stairway landing, bathed in
pastel light from the stained glass overhead,
boasts a built-in bench whose hinged top reveals
a hidden storage bin. Behind the foyer there's
a closet, then a bathroom, and at the back,
the kitchen. On the flip side of the double-pile
plan, the living room, dining room and wash
porch are lined up.
Colonial Revival details
include hefty ceiling beams, waist-high wainscoting,
and classic columns in the archways--all in
a dark finish. This was the period when hardwood
floors came into their own, and the regularity
of the floor plan was emphasized by the parquet
border inlaid around the perimeter of square
rooms. A plan book published by the Pacific
States Savings, Loan and Building Company
around 1900 offered an elegant but economical
ten-room house that we would call a Classic
Box. Its construction cost? Only $10,000.
The Classic Box is capped
by a broad peak. A dor-mer window sticks its
head out from the middle--a hipped roof within
a hipped roof. At the cornice, the eaves are
usually enclosed, either a shallow re-lief
of plaster patera or swag garlands on the
frieze. Patera are abstracted petals in concentric
circles. Swag garlands are carved compositions
of fruit and flowers, draped like a piece
of cloth over two supports, and "tied"
with plaster ribbons. Also known as festoons,
the garlands sometimes appear in a band between
the first and second story. While this decoration
recalls Victorian ornament, other var-iants
of the Classic Box anticipate the Craftsman
era. On these later versions, the eaves are
no longer enclosed, and the exposed rafters
constitute decoration derived directly from
structure.
There is great variety
among window shapes on a single Classic Box.
The dormer window is short and broad, like
a winking eye. The double-hung win-dows on
the facade have a squarish appearance, and
on some, the upper portion is partitioned
into eight smaller panes, akin to its colonial
ancestors. The window arrangement is fairly
symmetrical in front, but on the side, windows
of assorted size are scattered chaotically
across a large page lined by slender, clapboard
siding. Some of these windows are as small
as twelve inches by eighteen inches; some
are stained glass; some have diamond-shaped
leaded partitions and do not even pretend
to open. Despite the discrepancies, every
window in a Neoclassic Box is invariably framed
by a wide strip of flat, wood trim.
Excerpt
from "Rehab Right - How to Rehabilitate
Your Oakland House Without Sacrificing Architectural
Assets"
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