Tuesday, December 08, 2015

HOME DESIGN

I'll probably be moving in February or March. We haven't started to look for a new house yet, but I'm hoping for something like the one above: a nice old gabled house on a cliff overlooking a valley...servants quarters...a stable in back.


Haw! That's what I want, but what I'll get will likely be something like this, above. That's okay...even modest new houses have improvements that would have been unheard of when I was a kid: big kitchens, unusual room shapes, the home office, lots of daylight, etc., etc. 


I've been reading about the history of home design and I'm amazed to see how many ideas that we take for granted are fairly recent. Believe it or not, comfortable chairs are a fairly recent idea, and even corridors...corridors!... are recent. Until the last 100 years or so you accessed your room by passing through other rooms to get there. Even Versailles (above) was built like that...well, mostly.


What I really want, and I'm afraid I may not get, is a nice, old fashioned front porch. I spent half my childhood on porches like that and I got some of my best kid ideas there. Who invented porches, anyway? I mean raised, front porches...the deep, spacious kind with a permanent roof. I think of them as an American invention, but maybe I'm wrong.


Pity the British poor. They had not only had no porch; they had no roof of any kind over their front doors.


Wait a minute, what am I saying? Pity the British rich, too! They had the same problem. With all their money the rich still had to stand out in the rain while they fished for their keys just like everybody else. Britains just don't believe in a sheltering roof over the front door.


Even the prime minister is expected to stand out in the rain while he waits to be admitted. How odd. Why not a porch? Why not recess the door inside the building?


But maybe I'm too quick to criticize. In the part of the U.S. I'm moving to there's very few porches, and very few foyers either.  The front door (above) just lets into the living room. No transition area, no greeting spot. A person coming in the door in the cold of winter lets in a gust of wind that probably sends every paper in the room flying. Yikes!


3 comments:

Mantan Calaveras said...

Personally, I'm fond of American Craftsman style homes. When I was very young we lived in a Victorian in East Oakland, but later we moved into a Craftsman home nearer the bay.

When I was little we used to visit the old lady down the street, and apparently her grandfather had built most of the houses on our block himself, ours included.

It only had a very small porch, not really large enough to set up chairs on, but enough to shelter on, and we even had a modest foyer.

I've since learned the importance of the porch. The production house we used while producing our movie had a good porch, and it was definitely the center of the action. We had production meetings there, we even recruited talent and fund raised from the porch. It's where the neighborhood comes to greet you.

Eddie Fitzgerald said...

Mantan: Yeah, Craftsman is great! It seems to be making a comeback, though the newer examples have a post-modern influence.

We do need to see more porches. I don't know how those ever went out of style. In some parts of the country decks are widespread but they have no roofs.

nodnarB said...

Porches are where you go outside, to be inside! It's the best.