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Craftsman

Craftsman

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Residential Property

Architectural Style

Craftsman

Description

The American Craftsman style was inspired by the the British Arts and Crafts movement which began in the 1860s as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution. The Arts and Crafts movement emphasized handwork over mass production.

The American Arts and Crafts movement encouraged originality, simplicity of form, local natural materials and the visibility of handicraft.

In Southern California, the Pasadena-based firm Greene and Greene was the most renowned practitioner of the original American Craftsman Style. Their projects for Ultimate Bungalows include the Gamble House and Robert R. Blacker House in Pasadena and the Thorsen House in Berkeley.

In Northern California, architects who designed Craftsman buildings include Bernard Maybeck, who designed Swedenborgian Church, and Julia Morgan, who designed eleven buildings for Asilomar and six buildings for Mills College.

In San Diego, architect David Owen Dryden designed and built many Craftsman California bungalows in the North Park district. The 1905 Marston House in Balboa Park was designed by local architects Irving Gill and William Hebbard.

Distinctive features of the Craftsman style are:

Symmetrical
Mixed materials
Shingles
Hand-crafted stone or woodwork
Low-pitched roof lines with gabled or hipped roof
Deeply overhanging eaves
Exposed rafters or decorative brackets under eaves
Front porch beneath extension of main roof
Tapered, square columns supporting roof
4-over-1 or 6-over-1 double-hung windows (Newer Craftsman houses may have )
2-over-1 or 3-over-1 casement windows

Adapted from

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