Transcript Document

1.1.3 Architectural Styles – Victorian
Jesse Sopko
Victorian Style
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Most popular in the US between 1860 – 1900
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In eastern America they typically have 3 stories
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In western America they typically have 1-2 stories
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Materials were usually bricks or local stone and were
roofed with slate stone
They were originally located in the UK but were
brought to America by the British.
• Bay window(window that sticks out of a house, that can have
windows on the side of it)
• Dentils(Molding going around the house with rectangle holes in
it)
• Column
• Dormer(window that sticks out from the roof that has a roof of
its own)
• Clapboard siding(wood siding)
• Transom(opening window above a door or window)
• Turret(small, skinny tower usually at the corner of a building)
• Portico(porch with a roof)
• Mansard roof(roof with two slopes, and often it is flat on top)
Common Features
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British Arts and Crafts movement
Gothic Revival
Italianate
Jacobethan
Neoclassicism
Neo-Grec
Painted ladies
Queen Anne
Renaissance Revival
Romanesque Revival
Second Empire
Stick-Eastlake
Industrial architecture
Popular Victorian house
styles
Common Examples of Victorian
Houses
References
• Features of Victorian Style Architecture. (n.d.). Eastconn.org. Retrieved
January 25, 2013, from
www.eastconn.org/tah/FeaturesOfVictorianStyleArchitecture.pdf
• Victorian architecture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (n.d.). Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia. Retrieved January 25, 2013, from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_architecture
• Victorian house - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (n.d.). Wikipedia, the
free encyclopedia. Retrieved January 25, 2013, from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_house