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  2. Ranch-style house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranch-style_house

    Book of rambler and ranch-type homes: designs and floor plans for 31 practical homes, 3rd ed. Home Plan Book Co., 1953. 92 low cost ranch homes, by Richard B. Pollman, Home Planners, Inc., 1955. Ranch homes for today, by Alwin Cassens, Jr., Archway Press, 1956. New modern ranch homes for town or country living, National Plan Service, 1956.

  3. Orrin Thompson (real estate developer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orrin_Thompson_(real...

    Orrin Thompson ranch style house. His typical house design was known as the rambler, or the ranch-style house; a modest one family house. Its style borrowed modern ideas that had been developed by Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie School. The design emphasized horizontality, large windows, a relatively flattened roof, and eaves that extend ...

  4. Dingbat (building) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dingbat_(building)

    Dingbat building named "The Mary & Jane" with styled balconies A stucco box. In a 1998 Los Angeles Times editorial about the area's evolving standards for development, the birth of the dingbat is retold (as a cautionary tale): "By mid-century, a development-driven southern California was in full stride, paving its bean fields, leveling mountaintops, draining waterways and filling in wetlands ...

  5. How One Designer Made a 60s Ranch Comfortable for Her ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/one-designer-made-60s...

    Designer Miriam Silver Verga tackled this 2,500-square foot gut reno during the pandemic, with every member of her six-person family (plus her mom!) in residence.

  6. Shotgun house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shotgun_house

    [citation needed] After World War II, shotgun houses had very little appeal to those building or buying new houses, as car-oriented modern suburbs were built en masse. [citation needed] Few shotgun houses have been built in the US since the war, although the concept of a simple, single-level floor plan lived on in ranch-style houses. [3]

  7. Splanch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splanch

    A splanch is not a ranch, and it is not a split level. Rather, it is a three-level house inside of a two-level skin. Typically, they are a center-hall type of home, built on a slab. On the ground level, there is a garage in front, loaded from either the side or the front of the house. Garages were one or two bays, depending on the size of the ...