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Tall and stately, the Italianate
house is easily identified by its pronounced
vertical lines. A two-story, slanted bay takes
up about two-thirds of the front, and a raised
porch with handsome portico fills the remaining
third and visually balances the prominent
bay. At the roofline, a projecting cornice
is supported by concave, curved brackets,
although the roof itself may actually be lower
than this "false front" would suggest.
In the past, cresting was the crowning touch,
but most of this iron lace is long lost to
metal salvage for post-Victorian war efforts.
Because the Italianate
style is a California adaptation of stone
structures built in seventeenth century Italy,
certain architectural elements have been translated
from stone into native redwood and douglas
fir. The square quoins at the corners of an
Italianate house are decorative versions of
the original masonry reinforcements, and the
corinthian columns on the porch are carved
from wood, not chipped from marble. Other
imitation elements, such as brackets, panels,
and keystones, communicate substance and stature
critical to the successful appearance of the
facade.
The windows on an Italianate
house have a three dimensional quality that
makes them resemble sculpture more than conventional
panes of glass. Long and narrow, the measurements
of the win-dow and its many accessories are
carefully proportioned to the size of the
whole house. The shape, as well as the size,
of the window frame, for example, is as graceful
as it is distinctive: arched, notched or indented,
it is rarely just rectangular. Slender colonettes
to either side of the window, a protruding
sill beneath, a decorative shield above, and
a squeezed pediment, segmented hood or bay
cornice to top it all off, turn the window
into a spectacular event, not just something
to look through.
The front door also reaches
out to the street. Beginning with sculpted
newel posts at the bottom of the front steps,
the extended entrance continues right up the
staircase with turned railing balusters to
the partially fluted columns on the front
porch. Overhead, a portico, which may in turn
support another balustrade, shades the front
door, itself much more than a flat, plain
surface. The solid wood is divided into recessed
rectangular panels, and the glass is cut for
sparkling highlights.
Inside there is a long
hall, with a series of doors. The first leads
to the gentlemen's parlor, the second to the
ladies' parlor with an additional bay window
of its own, the third to the dining room,
and the last, at the back of the house, to
the kitchen. Within the rooms, arched passageways,
reminiscent of the window shapes, provide
a more formal transition from one space to
the next. Sliding wood panels, solid and incised
like the front door, close off the rooms for
privacy as well as more efficient heating.
Even the white fireplace picks up its decorative
theme from the facade, with its mantel supported
by curved brackets and its round, arched opening,
just like the cornice outside.
The ceilings are high,
often twelve feet or more. To break up the
expanse of wall, wood wainscotting or lincrusta-walton
covers the first four feet from the floor.
A strip of molding circumscribes the room
at, or a foot or so below, the seam where
wall and ceiling meet. Wallpaper, typically
floral and sometimes garish, extends from
wainscot to molding. These techniques make
the tall rooms more in scale with the size
of people. Some builders installed a coved
ceiling instead of a cornice because it was
a less costly design feature. The rounded
corners give these airy spaces a comfortable
sense of enclosure.
When you look up to see
just how high that high ceiling is, you discover
an elaborate plaster rosette, some three feet
in diameter, from which to suspend chandeliers.
Originally the ceiling was wallpapered and
the rosette was painted a rainbow of colors
- the grapes purple, the leaves green, the
roses rose. When your neck gets stiff and
you look down, you find yourself standing
on wall-to-wall carpeting with an Oriental
rug on top. The Italianate room envelopes
you with things to see.
Excerpt from
"Rehab Right - How to Rehabilitate Your
Oakland House Without Sacrificing Architectural
Assets"
For information
on available homes of this style contact Brett
Weinstein or Hal
Feiger at Realty Advocates.
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