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The entry to the living rooms are double pocket doors and the living room ceiling is surrounded with box molding and underneath it, a picture rail. The floor is a carpeted hardwood floor with a plain 12-inch baseboard and all other rooms contain the same floor and ceiling finishes with a few variations in the walls.
In this bright and inviting living room created by Veida Sadri Design, the crown molding feels like a natural extension of the ceiling and fireplace's open grid-work design. The decision to paint ...
French doors with 14-pane windows open into the breakfast room. The living room mantelpiece is wooden with a projecting curved medallion on top and similarly incised baroque decoration. [2] Another set of double doors leads to the dining room, in the northeast corner of the house. It, too, has baseboard molding and a plaster ceiling cornice.
The dining room is across from the parlor, which it mirrors. A fireplace and bowfat are in the inside wall. Wainscot lines this room; there is a crown molding. A bedroom is located behind the dining room, with a door connecting the two rooms. A white chair rail divides the walls with a black base board. The floors are pine.
For years the open-concept floor plan popularized by HGTV — which combines kitchen, dining and living spaces into one gigantic room — was considered the height of home decor fashion. But some ...
The rooms of a shotgun house are lined up one behind the other, typically a living room is first, then one or two bedrooms, and finally a kitchen in back. Early shotgun houses were not built with bathrooms, but in later years a bathroom with a small hall was built before the last room of the house, or a side addition was built off the kitchen.
The vestibule leads directly to the living room, which overlooks the Wisconsin River; [111] [106] the living room has large glass windows and a sloped ceiling. [ 111 ] [ 112 ] To the right of the living room is a "birdwalk", [ 111 ] which is cantilevered from the house.
The Nooker family opened the house to the public for occasional tours in either 1965 [105] or 1966. [105] [108] To allow visitors to see the drafting room and the original house, the Nookers relocated to the apartment at the rear of the first floor. [105] The tours included the second dining room from 1895 and the second-floor bedrooms. [9]