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Clapboard houses may be found in most parts of the British Isles, and the style may be part of all types of traditional building, from cottages to windmills, shops to workshops, as well as many others. In New Zealand, clapboard housing dominates buildings before 1960.
Wood clapboard is often imitated using vinyl siding or uPVC weatherboarding. It is usually produced in units twice as high as clapboard. Plastic imitations of wood shingle and wood shakes also exist. Since plastic siding is a manufactured product, it may come in unlimited color choices and styles.
Dilworth Terrace Houses: Historic Place Category 1: 1–8 Dilworth Terrace, Parnell: 567: Terrace Houses: Historic Place Category 1: 29, 27, 25 Symonds Street: 568: Emerald Villa: Historic Place Category 1: 4 Tohunga Crescent, Parnell: 571: Bishop Pompallier's House (Former) Historic Place Category 1: 57 St Marys Road, Ponsonby: 573: Synagogue ...
The 17th-century clapboard home is on the National Register of Historic Places. The task before them—to remake an already photogenic house to wholly suit its new inhabitants—was, in a way ...
Historic house museums in New Zealand (20 P) Pages in category "Historic homes in New Zealand" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total.
By Beth Woodson and Kristy Harvey. From the Kennedy compound to FDR's Little White House, white clapboard houses are part of America's history. The classic style and design of these charming homes ...
Longwood is an historic house south of Featherston, New Zealand, built for the Pharazyn family in 1906 and home to the Riddiford family for much of the 20th century. It replaced a c.1857 house built by Henry Bunny which he named after Longwood House , Napoleon's residence on Saint Helena .
Olveston Historic Home is a substantial house and museum in an inner suburb of Dunedin, New Zealand. The house was designed by Ernest George in the Jacobean style in the early 20th century for the Theomin family .