People think that prairie house must be in a wide space cause it s a horizontal design and not vertical.
Prairie style roof slope.
If you re looking at a gable roofed home that fits part of the description but lacks the boxiness of the standard prairie you might actually be looking at a craftsman style home.
The roof 50 squares has some complexity because of a 45 degree house section and a chimney.
This 4 bedroom 3 5 bath contemporary prairie style home has the signature shallow slope wide overhang hip roof of frank lloyd wright s architectural design house plan 196 1008.
The typical roof slope follows specific materials and design techniques to ensure perfect safety from leakage.
The spirit of prairie style home plans remains alive in these designs.
The upper slope is low pitched and the lower slope is high pitched.
Gambrel roofs are the traditional barn style roof.
But it fits well as prairie style house able to seamlessly merged with the landscape.
A common range is given from 1 12 to 4 12 whereas conventional dimensions vary from 4 12 to 9 12 but the steep roofing technique follows slope above 9 12 with additional fasteners.
While ranch style developed in the 1930s in california from the convergence of spanish colonial and craftsman architecture among others the prairie aesthetic contributed to the proliferation of ranch architecture in the form of the broad hip roof like what we see in this example.
The distinct personality from this house is the obvious horizontal lines and the low slope roof.
Created by architects including frank lloyd wright these homes are typically square in design and have shallow pitch roofs with overhangs.
History of prairie style.
It is a planks on rafters roof that was originally tar and gravel.
The style consists of 2 sides with a ridge at the peak just like gable but each side actually consists of 2 different pitches.
We have a prairie style house in east tennessee mixed humid climate zone 4a built in the 1950s with a low slope roof pitch of 1 5 per 12.
Prairie house plans are inspired by straight lines of the horizon on a prairie and are meant to live in harmony with the environment.
They typically feature clean lines with massive square porch supports and casement windows in rows.
Tall glass windows suggesting openness and warmth.
Prairie style homes feature a low pitched roof usually hipped with a wide overhang and have boxed shapes with a horizontal emphasis.
The picture makes it easier to understand than to explain.