Craftsman / Arts and Crafts Home
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A vintage Craftsman typical
of West Petaluma |
Practical and Open yet Inspiring
Key Features:
- Low-pitched, gabled roof (occasionally hipped), with wide, unenclosed
eave overhang
- Roof rafters usually exposed
- Decorative beams or braces under gables
- Porch support bases extending to ground level (without break
at level of porch floor)
- Porch supports usually squared and sometimes slanting inward
West Petaluma is home to a number of beautifully preserved and
restored craftsman homes with wood, shingle, and stucco siding.
Additionally, many of Petaluma’s newer executive home developments
have chosen the craftsman style. The Brewster district holds many
of these period homes, which range from modest 1000 sq.ft. cottages
to open and spacious +2600 sq.ft. estates. Westhaven and Southgate
are two of the most recent developments to showcase the modern Craftsman
home.
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(Historical information provided by Realtor.com)
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Brainerd Jones Craftsman
ca. 1910, Brewster District |
“The bungalow was the dominant style for smaller houses built
throughout the country during the period from about 1905 until the
early 1920s. The Craftsman, the most popular style of bungalow,
originated in Southern California and quickly spread-via pattern
books and popular magazines-throughout the rest of the country.
Anyone, anywhere, as long as they lived near a train depot, could
pick a bungalow style out of a Sears Roebuck or Aladdin Redi-Cut
catalog and have the whole house-plumbing and all-shipped to them.
The roots of the American bungalow are found in the Indian province
of Bengal. Eighteenth-century one-story huts with thatched roofs
were adapted by the British, who used them as houses for colonial
administrators. In the 19th century, the "bangla" or bungalow's
economy of space, simplicity of form, and closeness to nature inspired
the English architects for the Arts and Crafts (Craftsman) movement.
Some people believe that the bungalow is indeed the true American
house, giving a physical place for such bedrock family values as
practicality, simplicity, and openness. "It was in Southern
California that the bungalow…found its true home," said
the authors of Architecture in Los Angeles. "Here a young family
on the make, a sick family on the mend, or an old family on meager
savings could build a woodsy place in the sun with palm trees and
a rose garden. The California bungalow, whatever its size or quality
of workmanship, was the closest thing to a democratic art that has
ever been produced."
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The modern craftsman,
Westhaven subdivision, 2005 |
A Charming Craftsman
cottage |
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