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         Architecture Barns:     more books (100)
  1. Barns, Sheds and Outbuildings: A Practical Guide (Dover Books on Woodworking & Carving)
  2. Mississippi Piney Woods: A photographic study of folk architecture : [an exhibition at the Mississippi State Historical Museums] by Patti Carr Black, 1976
  3. Barns, Sheds and Outbuildings
  4. Backroad Home: Simple Country Designs of Cottages, Cabins, Barns, Stables, Garages and Garden Sheds with Sources for Blueprints, Kits, Building Accessories, Catalogs and Guide Books
  5. Barn Bees And Others: How Collective Endeavor Built a Nation
  6. Barns Of Arkansas by Angela B. Collins, 2005-01
  7. The Essential Book of Barns: Discovering the Design, Function and Form by David Larkin, 1995-10-15
  8. Carriage Barns: Sources of Building Plans, Kits, Products and Services to Help You Create a New Garage, Workshop, Stable, Backyard Office, Studio or Live-In with Old-Style Charm by Donald J. Berg, 1999-12-08
  9. An Age of Barns by Eric Sloane, 1990-06
  10. Michigan's Heritage Barns
  11. North Bay barns: Vanishing rural architecture by Judson Snyder, 1996
  12. Tobacco barns in Nelson County: A general history of tobacco and curing barns (Architecture in Virginia) by Courtney Newcomer, 1991
  13. The Badger collection by David Alan Badger, 1984
  14. Architecture and science associated the dairy barn at the University of Wisconsin-Madison by Holly E Smith, 2001

61. Subject Category - Architecture, Page 6
architecture category (chronological order) Transverse frame barns are often found in the southern part of the state, and include two gables on either
http://worlddmc.ohiolink.edu/OMP/Subject?subject=architecture&pg=6

62. Learn About Barns
Learn About Historic barns. Wisconsin architecture and History Inventory (AHI) The AHI is a record of historic properties across the state.
http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/hp/barns/learn.asp
Historic Preservation

63. Equine Architects For Horse Farms, Barns And Arenas
The leading equine architects and engineers in the US with architecture for horse farms, barns and arenas.
http://www.cmwequine.com/

64. Luxembourg Architecture
Luxembourg traditional architecture in the United States Not only houses but barns, bake houses, smoke houses were constructed of stone.
http://www.igd-leo.lu/igd-leo/emigration/archi.html
Luxembourg traditional architecture in the United States Some elements of Luxembourg traditional architecture Luxembourg traditional architecture is based on stone construction, a technique introduced by the Romans. Stone dominates the picture in every town and village in Luxembourg. Not only houses but barns, bake houses, smoke houses were constructed of stone. Gardens had no fences but stone walls, cemeterys had not wooden but stone crosses and monuments. Stone structures were coated in stucco and mortar in a variety of earth tones, whitewashing was a more common practice in the Norther part of Luxembourg. The layout plan of the main buildings is a stretched rectangle with the length of the building being generally 2 or 3 times their width. Typical rural Luxembourg architecture is exemplified by the "Quereinhaus", a combined house and barn , with house stable and barn in one lenghthy unit lying under one roof. The buildings were one and a half or two stories high. Above the second floor was the "Speicher" (from Latin: spicarium = grainery), used for storing grain and fruits. The floor of the "Speicher" was usually covered with a cement floor, more suitable for storing and supporting weight. It was rodent proof and provided protection in case of fire.
Half hip
or jerking roofs were common, they were eaveless, which means that there was virtually no overhang where the roof met the walls. Although the original cover of the roof was straw, which meant that a fire in a closely-built village could destroy a large part of the agglomeration, legal precriptions (10 July 1845) prohibited thatching and imposed fireproof material to cover the roof (Although the purpose of this measure was evident, it was not perceived as such by the impoverished population. A slate or tile cover added a significant weight, imposing the reconstruction of the roof framework and sometimes reinforcement or reconstruction of the supporting walls). Black slate was used throughout the country, however the Moselle area had a preference for red half cylindrical tiles.

65. Re: Barns And Basketball- One Example - Architecture Forum
The Design Community architecture Week and Great Buildings discussion board for architecture, design, great buildings, and related topics.
http://www.designcommunity.com/discussion/14628.html
Design
Community
Architecture
Discussion
Message - Re: barns and basketball- one example Responses Architecture Forum Architecture Students Architecture Scrapbook ... ArchitectureWeek
Posted by JWmHarmon on February 12, 2002 at 09:39:15: In Reply to: Re: barns and basketball posted by JWmHarmon on February 12, 2002 at 07:48:53: http://www.vintagewoods.com/pictures/HVEstate.htm Barn conversion possiblities. Check out the link below.

ArchitectureWeek
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66. Re: Barns And Basketball - Architecture Forum
The Design Community architecture Week and Great Buildings discussion board for architecture, design, great buildings, and related topics.
http://www.designcommunity.com/discussion/14608.html
Design
Community
Architecture
Discussion
Message - Re: barns and basketball Responses Architecture Forum Architecture Students Architecture Scrapbook ... ArchitectureWeek
Posted by JWmHarmon on February 12, 2002 at 07:48:53: In Reply to: barns and basketball posted by chris on February 11, 2002 at 10:30:18: Reminds me of my childhood on the dairy farm. We had a 40 X 60 pegged post and beam barn with a full height central bay with 20 feet high double doors on both of the long sides. You could drive a loaded hay wagon in one side and out the other. We had two hay lofts on either side of the central bay. We had cattle holding area under one side loft. Attached to the main barn was a milking parlor 12 X 60 divided into two sections, one for milking and one for milk storage and wash room. When enough hay was removed from one of the lofts, we played basketball in that loft. Uneven plank flooring made for intersting bounces of the ball. If I were to build a barn house today, I would consider using the central bay as a basketball court/atrium/open space. One could also use one of the lofts as a ball court, but the space in the central bay allows for baskets at both ends with no overhead clearance problems. The lofts could become bedrooms with or without baths and the areas under the lofts would be the living, dining, kitchen, and bath. You are limited only by your imagination as to how you arrange these rooms. What arrangement is it that YOU want? Depending on the type of roof you choose you may have a third level that could be used as an attic space or as additional rooms. A Dutch roof lends itself to additional rooms.

67. NP Architecture/Design Books
architecture/Design Books barns traces geographical and chronological continuities of type, design, and construction, and Dutch, German,
http://www.wwnorton.com/NPB/nparch/vlach730867.html
ISBN: 0-393-73086-7
March, 2003
400 pages, over 800 black-and-white illustrations and includes CD-ROM with easy-to-use TIFF files of every image and a link to the Library of Congress
Hardcover
Barns John Michael Vlach Overview A far-reaching visual survey of farm buildings across the United States, tracing their historical and regional influences. The first in the Norton/Library of Congress Visual Sourcebooks series, Barns presents a broad, fresh, and newly informed visual analysis of one of America's fundamental building types. In a nation founded upon agrarian principles, with a cultural and physical landscape as vast as it is diverse, the barn has long been recognized as an American icon. Drawn from the vast holdings of the Library of Congress, nearly 1,000 illustrations provide a tour of barns across the United States, from New England to the Great Lakes to the South, Midwest, and Far West. Barns traces geographical and chronological continuities of type, design, and construction, and Dutch, German, French and Spanish influence. Captions identify each document and building, and all images are included on a CD-ROM with a link to the Library’s high-resolution files. Barns is the first comprehensive visual resource of its kind, an invaluable tool for architects, historians, students, and all those who love barns.

68. Scran - Drawing Of A Half Timbered Dovecote At Goldington
architecture, barns, Tithe barns, Agricultural buildings; Dimensions; What architecture, barns, Tithe barns, Agricultural buildings
http://www.scran.ac.uk/000-000-654-295-C
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69. SMHS - The Historic Architecture Of Sevier County, Tennessee
This kind of information is included in The Historic architecture of Sevier County, In the book East Tennessee Cantilever barns, University of Tennessee
http://www.smokykin.com/smhs/arch2.html
SMHS - The Historic Architecture of Sevier County, Tennessee
ROBBIE D. JONES
Almost every Tennessean knows that Sevier County, Tennessee, is the home of Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville, Dollywood, and the main entrance into the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Although these places are significant to the tourism-driven economy of Sevier County, its history and architecture span over two hundred years and cover much more than the recent craze of country music theme parks and outlet shopping malls. For example, did you know that the agriculturally-dominated economy of the county in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries resulted in not one, but two distinct barns types unique to the region? Millions of tourists and locals alike have marveled at the wonderful Sevier County Courthouse in Sevierville, but did you know that it's probably the most elaborate courthouse ever designed by a nationally-known architectural firm based in Louisville, Kentucky? This kind of information is included in The Historic Architecture of Sevier County, Tennessee

70. River Falls Public Library - Architecture
In addition to many books on architecture around the world and in Symbols of optimism, pride and practicality, barns are as diverse as the people who
http://www.rfcity.org/library/readers/Dec2004/architecture.html
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Kid's Stuff Teen Sites Job Seekers ... Public Library December 2004 features books and links about Architecture
In addition to many books on architecture around the world and in general, the library has a number of wonderful books featuring Wisconsin and regional architecture. Below are just a few. HIST 790.92 Lun The Architecture of Edwin Lundie by Dale Mulfinger Through-out a fifty year career in St. pail, Lundie designed more than 300 projects, predominantly residences. His architectural designs are considered among the best work of Minnesota architects in the twentieth century but what set Lundie apart from his colleagues was his devotion to detail and love of fine craftsmanship. In this book, the author brings together a foward by David Gebhard that sets Lundie in the nation context, a biographical essay by Eileen Michels, his own piece assessing Lundie's design principles, outstanding color photographs by Peter Kerze, beautiful renderings in pen and ink by Lundie himself, and thirty profiles of individual buildings.

71. From Skyscrapers To Barns And Everything In Between
He adds, “In contrast to the national integrity of English architecture . . . American architecture is marked by a dynamic heterogeneity, a heterogeneity
http://www.neh.gov/news/humanities/2002-01/skyscrapers.html
From Skyscrapers to Barns and Everything in Between By Paulette Campbell Virginia's most enduring legact lies in its architecture, says Richard Guy Wilson, a professor at the University of Virginia, far more than through painting, literature, or any other traditional art form. He mentions Mount Vernon and Monticello as two of the most famous historic houses in the country, and cites Colonial Williamsburg as the touchstone for understanding life in the eighteenth century. But there are unexpected architectural treasures to be found, he says, among the county courthouses, the rural churches, the Civil War cemeteries, and even the shopping malls. They are all part of a new guidebook: Buildings of Virginia: Tidewater and Piedmont Structures both famous and obscure can be found on its pages. There is Pear Valley on Virginia’s Eastern Shore, a one-room, yeoman farmer’s cottage believed to date from 1740 with a chimney that measures ten feet across at the base. A number of churches are included, among them St. Luke’s Church in Isle of Wight County, the earliest surviving Anglican church in the state. Anglicanism had been the state’s official religion until disestablishment in 1786. Another, Christ Church in Lancaster County, dating from pre-Revolutionary Virginia, offers testimony to the power of the patron, in this case Robert “King” Carter. “In churches such as this . . . the local gentry would express their status by having their family pews raised higher than those of the lesser members of the congregation,” Wilson writes. Still another is the Third Street Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Richmond, which dates back to 1859, a reminder of the existence of a sizable free black population in the state before the Civil War.

72. Index Terms List For NTL INDEX - National Trust Library, UM Libraries
barns. see also Farm Buildings; Stables; architecture, Agricultural see also architecture, Agricultural; barns; Outbuildings; Stables
http://www.lib.umd.edu/NTL/indextermsa-l.html

National Trust Library Quick Links:
Home About Us Archival Collections Catalogs and Databases ... Catalogs and Databases > Index Terms List A - L
Index Terms List
A - L
A list of terms used to categorize NTL articles and search the NTL INDEX. Due to its size, the alphabetical list has been broken into two sections. Terms beginning with the letters M through Z can be viewed by clicking here . You can also view a list of index terms arranged by Subject . For a definition or clarification of these words as used in the NTL INDEX, see the Glossary A B C ... L Go to Index Terms M - Z Go to Index Terms by Subject
A Abandonment: see Demolition by Neglect
ABANDONED SETTLEMENTS
ACID RAIN
see also Pollution; Environmental Factors
Adaptive Reuse: see Adaptive Use
ADAPTIVE USE
see also Mixed Use
ADOBE
see also Building Materials
AIRCRAFT, AIRPORTS, ETC.
see also Transportation Buildings and Structures
AMUSEMENT PARKS
see also Boardwalks; Carousels; Resorts
APARTMENT BUILDINGS
Aquariums: see Zoos, Aquariums, Etc.
Arcades: see Shopping Centers and Malls
ARCHAEOLOGY
ARCHAEOLOGY, INDUSTRIAL

73. Centre County Architecture
Victorian fashion came to Centre County in architectural pattern books and popualr First built by German settlers, these barns have become an important
http://centrecountyhistory.org/ccarch.html

CCHS Main

Preservation

County Architecture
Centre County on the National Register

What is the National Register?

Researching Historic Properties

National Register Districts and Properties

Centre County Architecture
A Guide to Styles

Centre County, Pennsylvania Established 1800 Bibliography Glossary Centre County was, for the first half century or so of its history, cut off from more populated areas of Pennsylvania by the "Endless Mountains," the long folded Appalachians that can be seen from nearly every point in the County. Because this isolation limited exposure to new architectural ideas, early local building styles — folk housing — repeated styles that were similar to what had been built by the County's first British and German settlers. As these styles changed over the years to meet an owner or builder's own needs and ideas, they took on a vernacular style, meaning common or local. While vernacular houses, plus conservative versions of earlier British styles continued to be built throughout the 1800s, new Victorian styles began to be introduced mid-century. Victorian fashion came to Centre County in architectural pattern books and popualr journals, and through the arrival of railroads bringing news of other places and other ideas. By the 1860s, the county was being swept into the nation's cultural mainstream. Architectural examples of a full range of Victorian styles — from Gothic Revival to Queen Anne — can be found throughout the County. After the turn of the century, county residents had the opportunity to choose what best fitted their needs from a new set of increasingly available national styles. Craftsman Bungalows, Prairie-style Foursquares, Dutch and English Colonial Revivals, highly detailed English Tudor Revival homes, and even buildings in the International and Moderne styles were available through architect-designed plans, pattern books, and mail-order catalogs.

74. National Trust | Architecture | Agricultural
Agricultural architecture and buildings protected by the National Trust. One of the largest barns in the country, Middle Littleton Tithe Barn in
http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-chl/w-places_collections/w-architecture_b
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Agricultural architecture and buildings
From fish ponds to farmhouses, dovecotes to duck decoys, we care for a wide variety of agricultural buildings and features. They reflect historical changes in agricultural technology and farming practice, the agricultural base of the country house estate, and the historical link between subsistence, field sports and the traditions of the countryside. Duck decoy You can see a rare example of a fully working 17th-century decoy at Boarstall Duck Decoy in Buckinghamshire. Dovecotes The stone dovecote at in Bedfordshire holds nesting boxes for over 1500 pigeons. Kinwarton Dovecote in Warwickshire dates from the 14th century and still houses doves. Half-timbered Hawford Dovecote in Worcestershire is the surviving building of a monastic grange. Also in Worcestershire, Wichenford Dovecote dates from the 17th-century and is black-and-white half-timbered. An interesting octagonal dovecote, with doves, can be found at

75. 1859 Rural Architecture: Or, How To Build Country Houses And Out-buildings.
barns, stables and outbuildings, churches and schools. 71 floor plans. The House A Pocket Manual of Rural architecture Feedback
http://www.housemouse.net/ruralarchitecture.htm
THE HOUSE: A POCKET MANUAL
of
Rural Architecture
OR, . . .
COUNTRY HOUSES AND OUT-BUILDINGS;
DESIGNS AND DESCRIPTIONS
OF COTTAGES, FARM-HOUSES, VILLAS,
AND OUT-BUILDINGS, OF VARIOUS COST
AND IN THE DIFFERENT
STYLES OF ARCHITECTURE, ETC., ETC. With Numerous Original Plans, DESIGNED BY F. E. GRAEF, ARCHITECT, AND OTHERS. Originally published in 1859 by Fowler and Wells,
PDF eBook of House Plans only, 2004, Merrymeeting Archives. 120 e-pages, illustrated with cottages, one-and-a-half-story cottages, two-story cottages, villas, barns, stables and outbuildings, churches and schools. 71 floor plans. There are 71 floor plans total, consisting of 57 floor plans of 31 houses, 12 barn floor plans (includes barns, stable and piggery), 1 church plan, 1 schoolhouse plan. Table of Contents: Chapter Description COTTAGES OF ONE STORY. Preliminary Remarks - A Log Cabin - Hexagon Plan - Plan for Three Rooms etc. - A Southern Cottage - Another Cheap Cottage Plan - Plan for Additions - An Extempore House STORY-AND-A-HALF COTTAGES. Preliminary Remarks - Plans for a Small Cottage - An Italian Cottage - An English Cottage Plan - A Suburban Cottage - A Gothic Cottage - A Symmetrical Cottage - A Semi-Southern Cottage HOUSES OF TWO STORIES.

76. House Plans And Floor Plans For Old Architecture Building Plans.
architecture building house floor plans from old house plan books with garage plans Old barn plans. barns, Stables, Carriage Houses, and Vintage Garages
http://www.housemouse.net/

Original Books

Louden Catalog No. 52

Everything for the Barn
House Plan PDF eBooks ... Site Index
Merrymeeting eBooks
Reproductions from old house plan books, 1830s-1920s eBooks are delivered to your email in an internet link within 1 day; often within 1 hour. References.

California Mission House Plans 1923 Sample California Homes, 1923 Book of House Plans
DOWNLOAD: PDF
Purchase now

Southwestern Bungalow Plans 1910 Sample Fifty House Plans for Home Builders in the Southwest
DOWNLOAD: PDF Purchase now Fifty House Plans for Home Builders in the Southwest. Illustrated. 54 e-pages, 4.77MB, printable. Originally published in 1910 by Associated Architects in Dallas, Texas. Republished as PDF, 2003, Merrymeeting Archives Multi-family House Plans from 1908 Victorian Two Family and Twin Houses DOWNLOAD: PDF Purchase now Victorian Multi-family Housing Plans. Illustrated. 90 e-pages, 10.94MB, printable. Queen Anne Victorian and other Victorian-style multi-family housing designs and floor plans from 1908, Two Family and Twin Houses, originally published by Wm. T. Comstock, New York; eBook of house plans republished by Merrymeeting Archives, 2005. Vacation homes, circa 1900, and working with an architect.

77. Ricker Library Newsletter Spring 1997
on subjects as diverse as American barns and grain elevators, Nigerian traditional architecture, Indonesian rice barns and Texas folk architecture.
http://www.library.uiuc.edu/arx/Newsletter/newsS98.htm
*News from the Architecture and Art Library* RICKER *University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign* V.8 No. 2 Table of Contents Librarian's Corner New Source for Vernacular Architecture Thanks to... In Memory of Prof. Weller ... Library Staff
Librarian’s Corner
by Jane Block, Ricker Library I would like to call your attention to two wonderful new acquisitions to Ricker Library. Through our participation in the Library-wide competition funded by a National Endowment for the Humanities Challenge Grant, Ricker Library received two microfiche sets produced by the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The first, Artist Files , contains some 200,000 separate items representing more than 20,000 artists (painters, sculptors, graphic, conceptual, installation and performance artists, illustrators, photographers, architects and film makers.) The files were established shortly after the MOMA opened its doors in 1929. The importance of the files lies in the fact that many lesser known artists are included who have not as yet had books or exhibition catalogs devoted to their work. Many who are included are not listed in the standard biographical directories. Thus the information in the Artist Files may be the only documentation on a particular artist. The contents of the files are quite varied including gallery invitations, press releases, correspondence with art dealers and collectors, posters, newspaper clippings, price lists, and occasional photographs. The files are arranged alphabetically by the artist’s name and chronologically Spring 1998 within each file. The set consists of approximately 5,200 microfiche.

78. Powell's Books - Great Bridge: The Epic Story Of The Building Of The Brooklyn Br
1, Beaverton, architecture barns and Bridges. 8, Burnside, Sale Books- History. 4, Burnside, architecture- Types. 11, Catacombs Warehouse, Americana- New
http://www.powells.com/biblio?show=TRADE PAPER:SALE:067145711X:8.98;show_locs=ye

79. Shaker Architecture
The Distinctiveness of Shaker architecture by Robert P. Emlen As I passed by the clapboarded frame farmhouses and connected barns of Cumberland County,
http://www.shakerworkshops.com/emlen.htm
Shaker Architecture
Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village. View from the North West, West Gloucester, ME.
The Distinctiveness of Shaker Architecture by Robert P. Emlen
Originally published as the foreword in: The Architecture of the Shakers by Julie Nicoletta. Photography by Bret Morgan. Publisher Countryman Press, 1995. ONE SUMMER DAY YEARS AGO I was driving the back roads of Maine with the guidebook on the dashboard, looking for the Shaker village at Sabbathday Lake. As I passed by the clapboarded frame farmhouses and connected barns of Cumberland County, I wondered if these plain structures might be part of the Shaker village. "Nope," said the woman at a little country store where I stopped to ask the way. "Just up the road. You'll know it when you see it."
I wasn't so sure. What made the store keeper think I would recognize a place I had never been? Over the years, I had driven many a mile on several continents admiring all sorts of architecture. In graduate school, I had memorized the styles of American buildings for slide exams. Still, I had no mental image of a Shaker village. I wondered if I might drive right past this one without knowing it. And then, as I came over the hill, flanking the road before me was a compact and tidy village of substantial buildings. Although they generally resembled those I had passed on the farms and in the towns down the road, this place was clearly different. I knew that I had arrived in a Shaker village.
My memories of that first visit to Sabbathday Lake bring to mind the words of nineteenth-century travelers who recorded their initial impressions of Shaker villages. Invariably, their accounts remark on the distinctive appearance of the settlements: the number and quality of the buildings, the neat and clean look of the landscape, the air of prosperity about the community, the sense that Shaker villages are unmistakably different from the homes of their rural neighbors. The broad styles of Shaker architecture are not unique, nor are their building materials, nor their ways of working wood and cutting stone and forging metal. The real difference lies in how Shakers live their lives - and the homes they made for themselves reflect that distinctiveness.

80. Internship Program
Mr. barns earned his Masters in architecture from the University of Hawaii, with detailed studies in architecture of Asia, the Pacific and the United States
http://www.iiirm.org/fellow/fellow_n.htm
International Institute for
Indigenous Resource Management
FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM
MIKE BARNS
Mike Barns is Maori from New Zealand and serves as Treaty Settlement Negotiator for Tuwharetoa ki Kawerau, as an Executive Member of Tribal Government (Te Runanga O Tuwharetoa Ki Kawerau), and as Secretary of Traditional Land Trusts (Kawerau A12 Land Trust). Mr. Barns earned his Masters in Architecture from the University of Hawaii, with detailed studies in Architecture of Asia, the Pacific and the United States. He received the East West Centre Scholarship from the U.S. government and undertook international research and studies at the East West Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. He earned his B.Arch. from the University of Auckland in New Zealand. Mr. Barns is a Senior Fellow at the Institute. His work focuses on sacred landscapes and cultural risk. These studies include the investigation of cultural perceptions of the landscape and the idea of particular tribal groups having differing ways of perceiving and responding to the environment. Often, traditional perceptions have become ritualized in ceremony and prayer, and at a political level in resource management systems and tribal government environmental education, management and harvest programs. Of particular interest are the relationships of indigenous peoples with national or federal governments, utility companies, oil, coal, gas and uranium developers and the positions of indigenous peoples in such relationships. The Sacred Landscapes Program seeks to locate native peoples at a level of influence and control over their traditional resources and over landscapes that affect their social, cultural and economic well-being.

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