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A one-story house on a
raised foundation, with a hipped roof and
dormer window, the Neoclassic Rowhouse shares
many classic details with its brother the
Classic Box.
Its form, however, is more reminiscent of
its forebear, the Queen
Anne Cottage. Although
"rowhouse" suggests attached units,
it is used here to mean detached houses built
side-by-side, in a line.
The front portico that
is so pronounced on the Neo-classic Box is
absorbed within the rectangular perimeter
of the Rowhouse. The front door is recessed
to one side. On the same corner, the large
peaked roof reaches out over the door, and
rests on one, two or three classical columns.
The columns are abbreviated, resting as they
do on a three-foot high wall which encloses
the porch and accentuates the squared-off
plan. The character of the columns varies
from house to house. They can be square and
chunky with Doric features, or turned and
slender with simplified Ionic capitals. On
remodeled Neoclassic Rowhouses, the columns
are often camouflaged in asbestos siding,
or replaced by curlicued wrought-iron supports.
In some cases, the porch and its columns have
been eliminated altogether, walled-in and
weatherized to create more interior living
space.
Alley-like sideyards are
the result of narrow lots. Designers of the
Neoclassic Rowhouse were forced to capitalize
on the front and the back of the house for
natural light. On the street front the living
room had a slanted or square bay with double-hung
win-dows; in the rear, there is an airy sleeping-porch.
Where space allowed, a modest bay projects
into the side yard, the way an elbow sticks
out when your hands are in your pockets, no
matter how close you hold your arm to your
body. Notice the difference in proportion
between the broad and austere bay window on
the Neoclassic Rowhouse, and the elaborate
and elongated bay window on the Italianate.
The dormer window plays
an important part in vis-ually breaking up
the roof and venting the struc-ture, but it
does nothing to supplement the supply of light.
Behind the dormer is an attic space rarely
converted to living quarters. It is not surprising,
then, that when the glass in the dormer breaks
it is replaced with plywood or odd-lot lumber.
Like the Classic
Box, narrow white clapboard
covers the Rowhouse, wide, flat trim frames
its assorted windows, and a terraced stoop
flanks the front steps. Since the main floor
is raised as much as ten feet from the ground,
it can present a long climb to the front door.
For safety purposes, most steps have supplemental
railings that were not a part of the original
building. A railing design sensitive to the
colonial motif is graduated like the steps
themselves. The more common, hardware store
solution is a straight wrought-iron rail installed
on the diagonal, but its appearance is jarring.
Excerpt
from "Rehab Right - How to Rehabilitate
Your Oakland House Without Sacrificing Architectural
Assets"
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