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The Craftsman Style

 
  The Craftsman Style
Bungalow
House Styles by Jackie Craven
Craftsman Bungalow
1905 -1930
A classic bungalow in Mitchell, Nebraska
Photo courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration
Craftsman style bungalows usually have these features:
  Low-pitched roof
  Wide eaves with exposed roof rafters
  Decorative braces
  Porch with square columns
  One or one and a half stories
  Built-in cabinets, shelves, and seating
Many Craftsman bungalows also have:
  Stone chimneys
  Gabled dormers
  Sloping foundation
The Craftsman Bungalow is an all American housing style, but it has its spiritual roots in India.
 Native houses in the province of Bengal were called bangla or bangala.
 British colonists adapted these one-story thatch-roofed huts to use as summer homes.
For their comfortable bangla, the British arranged dining rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, and bathrooms around central living rooms.
This efficient floor plan became the prototype for America's Craftsman Bungalows.
The first American house to be called a bungalow was designed in 1879 by William Gibbons Preston. Built at Monument Beach on Cape Cod, Massachusetts,
the two-story house had the informal air of resort architecture. However, it did not express the true Bungaloid style.
Two California architects, Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene,
are often credited with inspiring America to build simple one-and-a-half story bungalows.
 Homes designed by the Greenes were publicized in magazines, and a flood of pattern books followed.
The Greene brothers also built a few elaborate, landmark "bungalows." The Gamble house (1909) in Pasadena, California
is a vast two-story home with a third floor pool room. Purists argue, however, that homes like this are contrary to the spirit of the Bungalow.
True Bugalows (say the purists) represent structural simplicity, efficient use of space, and understated style.
Most of the living area is placed on the ground floor.
Seventy-five years after Bungalows took America by storm, the style remains a popular favorite.
These comfortable and elegant little houses were top picks in our Dream House survey

 


Bungalow Floor Plan
Known as "The Craftsman," this style of home was popularized
in the early 1900s by Gustau Stickley as part of the so-called arts and crafts movement.
Following the gilded age, the architecture of homes turned away
from the ornate elegance of the high Victorian style in favor of a more simpler,
 back-to-nature look that stressed earthtone colors.
Built in small towns all over America,
these homes were warm and inviting,
with lots of stained wood trim on the inside and stone,
slate and stucco used on the exteriors.
The Craftsman style homes were known to have lots of built-in amenities,
such as benches, window seats and bookcases.
The idea was that people could walk into an unfurnished house
and feel as if it were ready to be lived in.
This four bedroom, three-and-a-half bath home was constructed in the Moonshadows subdivision in Hamburg Township, Mich.
There's 2,400 square feet on the two main levels, plus another
800 square feet in the finished basement. It has a formal dining room,
living room, family room, a study and a large eat-in kitchen. There's also an "engle nook" - a sitting area with a fireplace that's a great place for family
 and friends to gather to play games or just visit.
True to it architectural heritage, this home has lots of built-ins -
all done in the same stained oak wood used to trim out the entire house.
There's bookcases and window seats in the living room and den.
The main entry foyer has a built-in bench.
The family room has a built-in entertainment center with surround sound stereo.
Waincotting is used two-thirds up the dining room walls and is topped by a plate rail.
The basement, finished in art deco style, has a home theater.
The master bath has a separate shower and spa tub.

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