Italianate houses can be found in most towns throughout the united states.
Italianate hip roof.
Box with a hip roof box with a centered gable l or u plan l plan with a tower and a front gable.
An occasional square cupola or tower campanile.
Hipped roofs with wide overhanging eaves were ornamented with brackets often in pairs and in fancier homes capped by campaniles or square towers that rose above the roof line.
Victorian italianate homes usually have flat or low pitched roofs and large brackets in the eaves.
2 or 3 stories rarely 1 story.
Box with a hip roof.
Again modeled after a fashion started in england the italianate style rejected the rigid rules of classical architecture and instead looked to the more informal look of italian rural houses.
Inspired by the beauty of picturesque villas in northern italy the italianate style 1840 1880 was popularized by architects and writers such as andrew jackson downing.
For stand alone houses there were six basic categories noted here in architectural shorthand.
Italianate was one of the most popular victorian era housing styles from the mid to late 1800s.
L or u plan.
Large decorative brackets under an ornamental cornice.
Paired door entryway with glass in the doors.
Low pitched roof widely overhanging eaves.
Commercial buildings through 1880s.
Italianate town houses are identifiable by their wide projecting cornices with heavy brackets and their richly ornamented windows porches and doorways.
Box with a centered gable.
Homes in this style ranged from modest two story town houses to ornate mansions of sea captains and other wealthy entrepreneurs.
Hip roof with deep bracketed eaves.
This was simply a fashion that took hold.
In the 21st century these large regal homes are now town libraries or bed and breakfasts.
A two story rectangular building with a mild hip roof a projecting frontispiece and generous eaves with ornate cornice brackets was the basis of the style.
Simple italianate structures have a hip roof bracketed eaves and molded window surrounds.
L plan with a tower and a front gable.
Arched 1 over 1 or 2 over 2 windows with elaborate crowns.
Tall narrow windows most often on commercial buildings commonly arched or curved above.
Italianate is characterized by a low pitched hip roof wide overhangs bracketed cornice a variety of fenestration usually very tall narrow double hung one over one windows molded window surrounds and occasionally a cupola or balustrated balcony.
1850s through 1870s later in the west.
There was no pattern book for details or any main architect promoting the style.
For stand alone houses there were six basic categories noted here in architectural shorthand.
But this american house style is actually an imported design from great britain.
Italianate town houses are identifiable by their wide projecting cornices with heavy brackets and their richly ornamented windows porches and doorways.
The principal block is flanked by two lower asymmetrical secondary wings that contribute picturesque massing best appreciated from an angled view.