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  2. Dogtrot house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogtrot_house

    At Louisiana State University in Shreveport, the Pioneer Heritage Center [16] hosts the Thrasher House, [17] a two-room dogtrot house built in 1850 by Thomas Zilks near Castor, Louisiana. The home was moved to LSUS in 1981. The Museum of West Louisiana in Leesville includes the Alexander Airhart Home, a dogtrot house. [18]

  3. Shotgun house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shotgun_house

    A shotgun house is a narrow rectangular domestic residence, usually no more than about 12 feet (3.5 m) wide, with rooms arranged one behind the other and doors at each end of the house. It was the most popular style of house in the Southern United States from the end of the American Civil War (1861–65) through the 1920s.

  4. Buildings and architecture of New Orleans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buildings_and_architecture...

    The exterior is often wood siding, with a brick, stucco, or stone porch with flared columns and roof overhang. Bungalows are one or one-and-a-half-story houses, with sloping roofs and eaves showing unenclosed rafters. They typically feature a gable (or an attic vent designed to look like a gable) over the main portion of the house.

  5. Prow house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prow_house

    An extension of a gable roof wherein the ridgeline is extended at the peak of the gable creating an angled eave elongated at the ridge is known as a prow or "winged" gable. This roof detail could occur on a forward facing prow but is most commonly found on the end gables of ranch houses and other mid-20th century designs. It added additional ...

  6. Gablefront house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gablefront_house

    A gablefront house, also known as a gable front house or front gable house, is a vernacular (or "folk") house type in which the gable is facing the street or entrance side of the house. [1] They were built in large numbers throughout the United States primarily between the early 19th century and 1920.

  7. Rosedown Plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosedown_Plantation

    Rosedown's floorplan is in the French or Early Louisiana design in contrast to the American scheme of a hall through the center of the house. The plan has a main entrance hall, decorated with block-printed wallpaper by Joseph Dufour et Cie of Paris, with an elliptical mahogany staircase to the second floor, a parlor to the right, music room to the left, and an office, butler's pantry and ...