Small Houses of the Forties: With Illustrations and Floor Plans
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From Cape Cods to Colonials, Small Houses of the Forties offers an eden of illustrations of cozy, charming domiciles, complete with color combinations, charts, and diagrams. This complete republication of a now-rare volume is also filled with vintage dollars-and-sense information for the postwar homebuyer, including mortgage guidance, amortization schedules, valuations, and construction costs of the times.
A nostalgic flashback to a simpler American dream of white picket fences, this entertaining and valuable reference will delight architecture enthusiasts, plan collectors, restorers, and historians alike.
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Small Houses of the Forties - Harold E. Group
To
BARBEE
Bibliographical Note
This Dover edition, first published in 2007, is an unabridged republication of the work originally published as House-of-the-Month Book of Small Houses by Garden City Publishing Co., Inc., Garden City, New York, in 1946. The original color illustrations have been reproduced in black and white for the present edition.
International Standard Book Number: 0-486-45598-X
Manufactured in the United States of America
Dover Publications, Inc., 31 East 2nd Street, Mineola, N.Y 11501
9780486140926
POINT AND COUNTERPOINT
WE POINT with pride to the privilege of acknowledging the splendid assistance and cooperation of the organizations, the government agencies, and the many individual persons, both professionals and amateurs alike, all of whom have lent an ear or voiced a suggestion as a counterpoint to producing this book.
To Harry L. Graff, president of the Monthly Small House Club, Inc., sincerest thanks for his counsel, for the lending of the original art work, floor plans, and elevations of all of the Houses-of-the-Month shown herein, and for his permission to reproduce them.
To Rex Ceder, for his careful and unremitting labor in preparing the format, the illustrations, and general layout, and for sharing the midnight oil.
To Alvina Rich Lewis, who untiringly added her many years of journalistic experience to unsplitting infinitives, reconstructing sentences into readable English, and translating illegible scribbling into final manuscript.
To Howard Leland Smith, whose recognized authority as Principal Architectural Advisor of the Federal Housing Administration makes his contributed article a watchword to all prospective home owners.
To Miles L. Colean and the Twentieth Century Fund, for permission to use excerpts from their excellent book, American Housing
.
To Federal Housing Administration, for their many aids, suggestions, and cooperation.
To National Adequate Wiring Bureau for their ever-cooperative aid and for their permission to use both their technical findings and their valued seal of approval.
To the American Institute of Architects, for their permission to reprint certain copyrighted forms and to quote some of their professional procedures.
To the Small Homes Council of the University of Illinois, for their permission to use charts and material prepared for their Bulletin.
To Charles W. Russ, Howard Warren James, Jesse James Ceder, Margot Gayle, and Marie E. Group, who have each individually given of their time and talent.
We especially acknowledge the cooperation and contributions of the architects whose works appear in this volume.
January, 1946
H.E.G.
THE HOUSE-OF-THE-MONTH ARCHITECTS
EIGHT of the foremost architects whose names are synonymous with the designing of small houses have contributed to this book. Each had previously been chosen to design a specific type House-of-the-Month in recognition of his particular talents and style.
Tens of thousands of prospective home buyers, many hundreds of banks and lending institutions, and the seals of undisputed and authoritative housing organizations bear ample testimony that the plans and elevations that have come from the drawing boards of these architects have met nationwide acceptance and acclaim.
Henry Otis Chapman
George D. Conner
E. Burton Corning
Randolph Evans
Roland A. Gallimore
William J. O’Connor
Albert E. Olson
Royal Barry Wills
INTRODUCTION
THIS BOOK is written in an attempt to give Mr. and Mrs. Average American an opportunity to see the best possible collection of houses in the small house field. The houses are priced for the average pocketbook. They are designed for average living. Each house has been chosen and named a House-of-the-Month by a national housing organization, the Monthly Small House Club, Inc., which for many years has been crusading for better house design, construction, and financing.
Every care and precaution has been employed to make these Houses-of-the-Month comply with all known factors in good housing. Outstanding architects and engineers in the highly specialized small house field have been chosen with predetermined policies toward creating a fashion review of the best small, popular-priced houses.
Hundreds of Commercial Banks, Mutual Savings Banks, Cooperative Banks, Federal Savings and Loan Associations, and other mortgage lending institutions have been franchised to operate a House-of-the-Month Club, in order to serve their individual communities with an authentic source for good housing and financing procedure. All of the houses shown in this book can be discussed in detail at any House-of-the-Month Bank or financial institution. Blueprints and building specifications can be obtained through them. If no financial institution operates the House-of-the-Month plan in your community, arrangements have been made by the publishers of this book for the purchase of the plans direct from the Monthly Small House Club, Inc.
Federal Housing Administration standards and construction requirements are complied with in all designing and engineering of each House-of-the-Month.
National Adequate Wiring Bureau has checked and approved the electrical layout for each House-of-the-Month.
Monthly Small House Club, Inc., originators of the House-of-the-Month, has put at the author’s disposal its resources of personnel and research.
No one book can possibly cover all the myriad details, facts, figures and specifications that would be necessary to present a one hundred percent analysis of the house building industry. Consequently, only the major elements that concern the building or buying of a small house are highlighted in this book. It is not intended to take the place of the counsel of your architect, your builder, your banker, and your realtor. The intention of this book is to introduce the prospective home seeker, usually a novice in the procedure of buying a house, to various phases with which he will be confronted. This book is not, nor could it be, a final and complete manual. It will, however, take you step by step, in simple lay language, through the choosing of your site, the selection of your builder, your architect and architecture, construction details and suggestions, the financing of your property, and a discussion of today’s housing market.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Copyright Page
POINT AND COUNTERPOINT
THE HOUSE-OF-THE-MONTH ARCHITECTS
INTRODUCTION
HOUSE PLANNING FROM
HOUSE-OF-THE-MONTH PROGRAM
PLOTS AND PLATS
ORIENTATION
ARCHITECTS AND ARCHITECTURE
BUILDERS AND BUILDING
THE DOLLARS AND SENSE OF HOME BUYING
AMORTIZATION SCHEDULE
NATIONAL CONSTRUCTION STANDARDS
PRICE TAGS FOR HOUSES
THE HOUSE WITH EIGHT FACES
G.I. BILL OF RIGHTS
PURCHASE PLAN FOR BLUEPRINTS
THE A. I. A. SHORT FORM FOR SMALL CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS
THE ALL-AMERICAN HOME TEAM
HOUSE-OF-THE-MONTH GLOSSARY
HOUSE PLANNING FROM
By HOWARD LELAND SMITH
Principal Architectural Advisor
Federal Housing Administration
A. Before you start to plan a house, select a building lot. Its location and topography will influence the design and determine to a large degree the proper room arrangement.
B. The following utilities should be available to the property—water, sewer, electricity, gas and telephone.
C. A desirable building lot should be located on a hard surfaced road and within easy walking distance of public transportation. Make sure that public snow removal facilities are provided to keep roads open in winter. Sidewalks are desirable along at least one side of street.
D. The neighborhood in which you select your lot should have police and fire protection. Garbage and trash collection also are features which the community should provide.
E. If you wish to maintain the value of your property over a long period, select a lot where zoning ordinances have been established. They will provide protection to your property against encroachments of business establishments, rooming houses, multi-family type dwellings, and also protect the area against other adverse influences.
F. It is essential that the community in which you locate is served by good schools, churches, shopping centers, and places of amusement.
G. After you have located a lot and before a contract is entered into for its purchase, examine it for the following conditions: Is the ground level enough to permit an economical plan? Are there any evidences of earth fill which may cause foundation settlements? Will the property lend itself itself to satisfactory drainage so that the basement will be dry? Is the soil suitable for gardening, trees, shrubs and grass?
H. After you have satisfied yourself that you have chosen a good site, obtain the services of a civil engineer or land surveyor to provide you with a survey of the property. The survey should furnish you with the following information: points of compass; lot lines (their direction and lengths); grade contours at one foot intervals; location and depth of sewer; location of water and gas mains and electric lines; location of all trees which you wish to preserve. Any easements through or along lot lines should be indicated.
I. Find out the direction of prevailing breezes in summer and note their direction with an arrow on your survey.
J. Before beginning preliminary plan sketches, obtain copies of all rules and regulations governing building activities for the area where your lot is situated. These may include a local building code, local zoning restrictions, fire underwriters regulations, and possibly a local, county or state sanitary law. If you plan to finance your house with an FHA insured mortgage, obtain a copy of the latest Minimum Property Requirements from the local Federal Housing Administration office having jurisdiction.
K. Design your house to be in harmony with those in the neighborhood.
L. Plan your house to fit the lot and thus avoid the need of changing existing grade levels to fit the house.
M. Strive for architectural appeal, not by means of false elements of design, but rather by simple lines that will lend dignity to the structure.
N. Avoid false fronts such as the use of brick or stone on the street facade, and the use of cheaper facing materials for the side and rear elevations.
O. Avoid trick
design features as they may place your house in a fad
category and adversely affect the value of your property over a long period.
P. It is wiser to spend money on good landscaping than on design oddities which are obviously used for dramatic purposes.
Q. When developing your floor plans, arrange your rooms to obtain privacy both from within and without.
R. Provide each room with ample light and