Interior Design Housing
Inches
"
Foot
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Condominiums advantages
1. Advantages of home ownership with the convenience of apartment living
Mobile home advantages
1. Economic-low cost and little upkeep 2. Parks may have great facilities and services 3. Movable
Cooperatives (co-ops) disadvantages
1. Everyone must abide by the wishes of total group
Custom home advantages
1. Everything is built to personal specifications
Manufactured house disadvantages
1. Limited selection 2. May need special equipment to install 3. Shipping large modules can be expensive
Manufactured house advantages
1. Lower costs 2. Reduced time for buildings 3. Can select different options
Custom home disadvantages
1. May be a complicated process - need to have a lot of patience 2. Expenses may increase more than budgeted for orignally
Tract house advantages
1. Models allows you to see what you're going to get 2. Planned community 3. Costs less than customs
Rental disadvantages
1. Money spent on it is not applied towards ownership. You have no property to show for your payments
Condominiums disadvantages
1. Monthly assessments are expensive, can be as much as a mortgage payment
Tract house disadvantages
1. Offers little individuality 2. Lots are generally of a minimum size 3. You don't know if the developer will be successful with the development
Cooperatives (co-ops) advantages
1. Owners have voice in how it is run and who their neighbors are 2. Advantage of home ownership with the convenience of apartment living
Mobile home disadvantages
1. Price deprecates rapidly 2. It may be considered 2nd class housing 3. Location may be limited to certain areas 4. Once you're in a location, it's not too mobile 5. High cost for moving and highway restrictions 6. Moving, taxing, and zoning regulations
Rentals advantages
1. Require less initial expense and less upkeep 2. Offer a variety of lifestyle choices 3. Readily available 4. Unlimited choices as far as styles, size, price, facilities etc.
Rough Draft
A first drawing or sketch of something. Can be done in pencil. Usually requires re-doing and correcting or refining for the final product
Elevation
A flat scale drawing of the front, rear, or side of a building from the floor level up to the ceiling
Linear Measurement
A measurement of a (one) "straight line"
Architect
A person or group of people who design and draw building plans for the construction of houses, commercial buildings (like schools) and bridges etc. They also can supervise the construction of the buildings and discuss important construction details with the builder. There is also "Landscape" ones that design gardens, fountains and outside areas that surround buildings.
Building Contractor
A person who supplies the materials to builds a house (and other structures) for a specified amount of money. Note: The design plans are still done by an architect
Floor Plan
A scale drawing of the location, size and position of the rooms, halls, door etc., one floor at a time. It usually includes all permanent fixtures like sinks, toilets, shower, stove, dishwater, refrigerator, kitchen cabinets, closets, doors, air conditioning units and heating units, water tanks, electrical panels etc.
Increments
An amount added to a thing to increase it. The best example would be the lines on a ruler. They're marked in these; the next lines is greater than the line before.
Cubic Foot
Cu Ft
Width
Distance across a thing. This measurement can be the same measurement as length if there are four sides to it. It is then referred to as a "square" where all sides are of equal length
Location
Specific placement of your home, urban, suburban, rural, large scale or small scale
Square foot
Sq Ft
Length
The longest way a thing can be measured. What a thing measures from end to end
Scale
The size of a plan, map, drawing or model compared to what it represents
Door Jamb
The vertical and horizontal pieces of wood that the actual door is attached to. It also can be called a door post.
Ruler, Yardstick or Tape Measure
These are instruments commonly used to measure lengths
Portico
a large porch usually with a pediment-ed roof supported by classical columns or pillars
Height
a measurement from top to bottom or how far up a thing goes
Stucco
a mixture of cement, sand and limestone applied to exterior walls as a covering
Rafter
a roof beam sloping from the ridge to the wall. In most houses, they are visible only from the attic
Hipped roof
a roof with slpes on all four sides the hips are the lines formed when the slopes meet at the corner
Gambrel Roof
a roof with two slopes on each side, the lower slope having the steeper pitch. Typically seen on Dutch Colonials
Bay Window
a set of two or more windows that pert rude out of the wall. The window is moved away from thew all to provide more light and wider views.
Turret
a small tower often at the corner of a building. It is a smaller structure while a tower begins at ground level. Queen Anne houses
Columns or Pillars
a support or structure system as well as a decorative system
Paladin Window
a three part window featuring a large arched center and flanking rectangular side light. Typically in living/family room or foyer.
Pediment
a triangular crown used over door windows or porches. Associated with classical style homes
Casement Window
a window that opens by swinging inward or outward much like a door. They are vertical in shape and are often grouped in bands.
Fanlight
an arched window above the door
Costs
crucial factor for everyone, construction expenses continue to rise, repairs, taxes, insurance, reduces the variety of choices
Availibility
desirable housing in a given area is often limited, growth and population shifts, housing is sometimes in short supply, apartments, condos and houses have been built to accommodate the rising demand for housing
Taste
fitting, harmonious, beautiful, changes person to person and time to time
Shed roof
has one pitch or angle to it
Gingerbread
ornate detailing and decoration. Found on Queen Annes
Shingles
protective coating on roof
Classical
refers to the architecture and design ideas of ancient Rome and greece
Six over Six
refers to traditional double hung window
Lifestyle
related to the values, social status and activities of household members, affects type of house they want to live in
Asymmetrical
the face of the house is not the same on both sides
Symmetrical Facade
the face of the house is the same on both sides
Facade
the front or face of the building
Eaves
the portion of the roof that projects beyond the wall
Dormer
the setting for a vertical window in the roof, it is called a gable one if it has its own gable or a shed one if it has a flat roof. They are found on the second story.
Gable
the triangular section of a wall formed by the end of a pointed roof
Clapboard
this is also known as weatherboard or siding, it is long, narrow boards overlapped to cover the outer walls. Typically seen on Colonials.
Climate
varies from warm to cool and from dry and humid, housing design changes to accommodate conditions.