Architectural Record Magazine AR 1904 10 Compressed
Architectural Record Magazine AR 1904 10 Compressed
Architectural Record Magazine AR 1904 10 Compressed
age taste of well-to-do people rather than the higher taste of those
who are specially trained.
The total effect, consequently, generally lacks the architectural
quality, the quality of careful composition, of the subordination of
detail to a single dominant idea, and of the careful search for stuffs
and furnishings which give distinction and integrity to the room.
The impression one gets in the majority of cases is overwhelmingly
302
THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD.
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 303
304 THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD.
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 305
and is either too clumsy on the one hand or, on the other, too
cheap and fragile. In spite of the considerable sums of money
which have been spent on some of these houses, the effect is gen-
erally that of a very commercial decorative art commercial not in
the excellent economic sense of obtaining a good result at a small
cost, but in the unfortunate sense of obtaining a poor result at
be good both for him and for his clients. His clients have every
right to insist that their houses shall be not merely conveniently
planned, but shall also be pleasant to inhabit. Wehave no sym-
pathy with the aesthetically austere and ungracious rooms which
some architects seek to force on their clients. The demand for a
cheerful, comfortable and homely atmosphere in a dwelling is abso-
lutely a legitimate demand, just as the demand that the interior
should be thoroughly designed is also legitimate and it is the ac-
;
tion and reaction between these two demands which will most
swerves from this high technical and professional ideal, he will not
obtain his full rights.
FIG. 10. SITTING ROOM IN THE RESIDENCE OP JOHN B. DRAKE.
Calumet Ave., Chicago, 111. Howard Shaw, Architect.
the open door and the narrow "side lights," and it was still fur-
nished or left unfurnished as a passage-way alone. The floor would
be covered with oilcloth, the walls would affect a surface of uni-
form tint or perhaps imitate in the papering blocks of stone or mar-
ble. The stairs went up at one side against the wall with no pre-
tence at shutting off or concealment.
Since the close of the Civil War there has been a disposition in
country houses to make the hall square and spacious, even if by so
doing the other rooms of the house on either story are somewhat
crowded or are diminished in number. It seems to be assumed
that the hall is a sitting room so desirable in itself that something
should give way to this disposition. Even in the cities and in the
deep and narrow houses used there, with windows only in
the narrow walls of the front and rear, this same arrangement
of a square hall has been popular, and although in that connection
Again in Fig 13 there is a hall with its heavy oak table and its
book-shelves there are the steps which take you up to a dining
;
screen, secondly by the two square posts which carry the top
girder, and thirdly by its position far in the rear of the room, al-
lowing of its most complete concealment by a curtain or by high
vases if they are desirable a negligible quantity, in fact, until you
need to ascend to an upper story. In this way the hall where we sit
is in reality a sitting room differing from others by the fact that
ithas no solid partition between it and the entrance hall.
Fig. 16 shows on a larger scale an arrangement compatible with
a very costly house. It is spacious and it is also rich with details
of great elaboration. The chimney-piece is richly made up of mar-
ble, plain below and carved above with escutcheons of arms and
with elaborate bronze fire-dogs. The fixed seat in the corner has a
deeply carved arm. Similar and even richer carving adorns the
stair in connection with its hand-rail and parapet the ceiling is
;
pire sofa with a mirror hanging above it whose frame with the
hooks smacks of the same early epoch, and the stair itself with its
long and wide landing is an excellent piece of the stair building of
a hundred years ago. Still more plainly is this antique art main-
tained in the halls shown in the two Figures 19 and 20. In this
instance there is carried out in the best manner that picturesque
and most interesting scheme, in which the newel of the stair is
formed by a spiral turn of the hand-rail supported by a multiplicity
of little balusters exactly like those of the ramp of the stair above.
This indeed, a most fascinating piece of the kind.
is,
leading to the "half pace" and two stairs leading from that plat-
form to the landing above. A good instance of that is given in
Fig. 23.
Figs. 18 and 25 give, in a pleasant way, memoranda of
the simpler and smaller staircases of our forefathers, showing
those arrangements by which the stair was partly sheltered from
drafts and the persons ascending and descending were partly shel-
tered from observation. These are always dangerous to the de-
signer, because the raking lines of the stair are always difficult to
manage and produce ungainly spaces, shapes and combinations.
The best are the simplest and one likes Fig. 25 for its close
building-in; hiding from the spectator all the sloping hand-rails,
wainscots^ base-boards and the like. Indeed, the more a stair can
be built in between walls generally the better thing it is. This,
however, is not a commonly accepted system, and Fig. 26 is an
instance of a stair which was evidently an object of pride to its
credit who, can come out of so difficult a task with a result so satis-
ment and might even be considered a sitting room but that it is not
fully partitioned off from the room on the higher level on the left.
Fig. 32 isa capital piece of hallway with doors leading in every
direction and therefore hardly fit for much use as a sitting room
except that two nooks are arranged with seats, one on either side
of the chimney-piece.
Fig. 33 shows only one side of the hall which this represents
and here are fixed seats in the recesses of the windows one on
either side of the fireplace, giving light though not much view.
sofa, its cottage piano, its comfortable chairs and stands bearing
lamps, is evidently a place of habitation, and the framed pictures
on the walls show refined choice in works of art.
the year, that there should be some windows with a sunny exposure.
So in the vicinity of New York, it is well to place the principal
apartments along the southerly side of the house ;
and the offices
and subordinate rooms to the north.
The question of the library is for our present purpose connected
very closely with the living-room. What we are discussing is the
dwelling which the library and living room will very often be one
in
and the same. Even in the case of the hard worker with pen or
typewriter, the room where his books are kept is usually the sitting-
room, he being' free to reserve a workroom opening from it, of
which he can shut the door and in which he can arrange his undis-
turbed thoughts and construct the lecture or the article which goes
to make him the breadwinner. There is, however, another side to
it, for in some houses the living-room is alrQ the drawing-room.
Many a family takes nearly this view of the situation viz., that
there must be a relatively large, airy and spacious room for the
family sitting-room and for the more intimate guests, while a com-
paratively small .reception room is used for the visitor who calls
in the way of mere ceremony, or in the way of business, or on a
well to the interior in which the family are to live and this is not
;
Again in Fig. -38 are seen the arrangements of the same room
from another point of observation. This is a noble sitting-room
indeed, with windows in three walls and a great brick chimney-
piece. Other illustrations of the same house will be found in Figs.
12-13, and the architect, Mr. Myron Hunt, is to be congratulated
on his success in designing this dwelling as well as that of Mr.
Healy.
In Fig. 39 there an interesting flavor of old tradition in
is
calculated for the hearth of the story above. The window high in
the wall and above the book-case with solid doors, is always an at-
tractive feature, and here, too, lies the book of him who may sit
chimney-piece must carry more than merely the frame of the hearth
above, and the adornment of the panels with a highly wrought
painting and with relief of flower and fruit in carving or in stucco
manifests more the importance of this feature. The fireplace
still
faced
itself is around with a mosaic of tiles about two inches square ;
against one of them seems to argue that they are not swung open
every day.
This matter of the sitting-room extends itself inevitably into the
larger library. Such a room as that shown
45 is the book-
in Fig.
room of a family possessing several thousand presentable volumes,
besides all the unbound and less attractive books which must accu-
mulate in cupboards and closets. There is an admirable ceiling of
plaster work in the Tudor design and in this case a paneling of
woodwork reaches the ceiling with the Ionic order in modified
form and as is proper in such a case the entablature is reduced to
;
on a very large scale, and furnished with sofas, chairs and fautcnillcs
FIG . 41. LIBRARY IN THE HOUSE OF HERMAN KELLY.
Cleveland, Ohio. Meade & Garfleld, Architects.
Ml
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 353
of a style between Louis XIV. and Louis XV. covered with some-
thing that looks like Beauvais tapestry. There are very rich tables
in the room, the farther one in the middle looking as if it were
adorned with gilded bronze of the best epoch of Louis Quinze,
while the nearer table seems to be inlaid with blocks of porce-
lain or possibly of Wedgewood ware. Fig. 50 shows a series of
rooms, and in view of the charming display of flowering plants
which almost fills them one wishes for a simpler background. But
this is indeed hypercritical
or rather it applies only to the picture
indeed the photograph be trusted to exaggerate the marking of
may
the pattern, and that which is dull red or yellowish brown on
ivory white will come out in a violent contrast in the photographic
plate. It is true that the half-tone process reduces this extreme
of contrast again.
Figs. 51 and 52 are views in a large ballroom: this cannot be
considered a sitting room in the ordinary sense, and yet in sum-
mer how delightful is a room to inhabit which is indeed of that ex-
traordinary size ! There is no place quite so cool as a very big
room with a moderate current of air entering at the windows and
doors. Such a current of air ceases to be a draft it does not
worry you with fears of to-morrow, it allows the whole room to
remain sweet and pure with a steady temperature. Give us for
our summer evenings a room not smaller than 40 by /o feet.
.401- III.
The Dining-Room.
The considerations of exposure and outlook, discussed above in
connection with the Living-Room, apply also to the Dining-Room.
Here, however, the question of outlook is not of equal importance
because the dining room will not be used, habitually, for other pur-
poses than the serving of meals. When it is to be so used when
the dining-room is also the family sitting-room the condition of
the two classes of apartment have to be considered simultaneously ;
ners. This resulted in cross lights passing diagonally over the table
from the ends, and the central position of each wall was available
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 355
*
but the necessary condition two opposite outer walls will not
often be obtained.
The foregoing considerations, based on the requirements of a
long table and a corresponding long room, will be found much
modified in the case of the much broader table, in fashion about
1875 to I ^9 an d of the round dining table, the use of which appears
to be increasing in popularity, and which demands less floor space
for convenient service than a long table of equal seating capacity.
Thus a round table five feet in diameter or thereabouts will ac-
commodate a party of eight with comfort, while a diameter of some
six feet will allow of ten or more seats. Hence a floor space of
15 feet across will be ample provision for the table of an average
household, making allowance for other dining room furniture out-
side of this space. Such a table, then, can be placed at one end
of the room, 15 feet wide, and could be well lighted from that end
wall, even with only one or two windows and the entire room need
;
nearly the same in the case of the square and of the round table.
The point is, in either case, that the dining room does not tend to
be long and narrow relatively as in the days of tables intended to
be adjusted in length to the requirements of a large party. The
table of recent years, with its square or round or less frequently
cular table-tops are kept in stock, and according to the size of the
dinner party the largest (accommodating twenty persons perhaps)
will be put in place or a smaller one accommodating fourteen,
twelve or ten. Thus 63 the room, being nearly square in
in Fig.
size of the dining-table
plan, is so large relatively to the ordinary
that it would accommodate a round-top or square-top table large
this shelf, wide or narrow, affords the best possible place for ex-
and the architects who are the most constantly occupied with the
dwelling houses of the children of those prosperous villagers the
men who build in the towns around Boston and along the north
shore those architects tellus that the old traditions remain, and
that the family who will spend several thousands of dollars for a
painting will not expend money for the adornment of the interior
for the carving of the mantel-piece, for the inlaying of the columns
in short, they say that it is a Puritan tradition to spend nothing
on your house, whereas the Puritan tradition has nothing to say
about the separate and portable work of art. Another such room
is Fig. 75, and in this the furniture as well as the permanent fittings
IV.
The Bedroom.
The French lady has always made her bedroom serve the purpose
of a sitting room. The French bedroom, at least in the cities, is
on the floor with the salon, the dining room, the library, and must
inevitably form suite with them. The French bedroom, being a part
of the series or groups of rooms on one floor which are
run together in a dwelling, has the same height of ceiling
and somewhat the same liberal decoration as the more pub-
lic rooms of the
appartement. Indeed, reception or en- in a
tertainment of any size the bedroom has to be thrown into the
other rooms for a more or less free use bv the guests and their
FIG. 85. BEDROOM IN THE HOUSE OF J. T. PIRIE, JR.
Bvanston, 111.
Myron Hunt, Architect.
hosts. is done
This however, this freedom of access is made pos-
ognition of the alcove, and that is the banishment not of the bed,
but of the toilet apparatus generally, into a separate room well shut
off from the bedroom proper. If we put bath and basin and all the
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 375
bedstead and the bed (the terms being used in the more usual sense)
are enclosed by a house which reaches the floor and conceals every-
thing within itself, there is certainly an added freedom as to the
use of the rooms for the purposes of life by day.
None of our examples to-day serve to remind us of any such
possibilities. Fig. 86 shows the twin bedsteads now and for a
dozen years much in fashion Fig. 85 shows the brass bedstead
;
toilet table and large glass, and its additional Psyche glass in which
the whole skirt may be viewed even to the floor; its dainty little
stand with two little drawers and yet capable of being moved about
the room. In all we have the make-up of a charming room for daily
life.
The room 85 again, with its delicate writing table, but large
enough, solid enough for the hasty notes to friends which the oc-
cupant may choose to indict without going to the library below,
with the fixed seat in the deep-seated window and the abundant
lighting from at least two sides, speaks of the most pleasant and
civilized life.
The old hot-air furnace was a better thing in many ways than the
more powerful modern apparatus.
The rooms which we have still to describe in brief, in which no
bedstead visible, are yet undoubtedly bed-chambers
is if one ma\
read their disposition and their old furnishings aright. Thus Fig.
90 has the old-fashioned high bureau (not a tallboy, but a bureau
so tall that it is removed from the modern class of "dressing
bureaus" while yet it has a mirror hung on the wall above it) is
either a bedroom or a large dressing room opening into the bed-
room partly left seen on the left beyond. What one likes in this is
the extreme simplicity of fittings and decorations. This is indeed
the way to make a room pretty at the lowest possible cost, un-
less we are to understand the hanging of the walls as of a woven
stuff ofsome kind rather than a wall paper, in which case a slightly
greater expense will have been incurred. Fig. 88 is furnished with
interesting pieces of old times, the bureau and the little round table
of much older type than the two chairs, but all ancestral in their
look. The room itself, with its comparatively low ceiling and its
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 381
very simple fitting up, is all that can be asked for as "most simple
and most gracious though here again the dreadful radiator stands
;
in the choice corner by the fireplace and explains why the fireplace
itself is bare without andiron and logs. Fig. 92 is a delightful
room. Its fixed and permanent "finish" is not seen, for curtains
conceal what otherwise would be in view but the open book-case
;
tells the story, and we learn that this also is of the simplest wood-
work finished in white enamel, as indeed are the little writing table,
the arm-chair drawn up to it, and so much of the door-trim as the
teenth century, are grouped in the sentimental way with the low
stand bearing the work-basket and the vase of roses but let no ;
hotels, and its application to the private house is obvious and easy.
than any ether room in the house. The most troublesome of all its
appliances, the waste pipes of the bath-tub and the basin, are them-
selves harmless under such modern conditions. The great closet
opposite the bath-room should have an electric bulb inside the door
and this will be sufficient to make the shelves above and hanging
space below far more available and far more easy to keep clean
and sweet than even in the homes of our ancestors.
The other room (Fig. 95), that with which a large dressing room
is associated, has the exceptional advantage that the two divisions
with burning logs and steaming kettles on the swinging cranes the ;
oak and the rows of burnished pans and old china on convenient
racks. On the deep-set window ledge smiled potted plants and in
a corner stood the spinning wheel. Connecting with it was the
woodshed, which in turn opened into the barn. Everything was
convenient and handy for the housewife and arranged with an idea
of minimizing labor. There are, doubtless, many who now own
palatial homes in town and country, which have every luxurious
appointment, who feel a longing at times, for a good square meal in
the old home of bygone days. Certain it is that brain as well as
brawn have been produced by just such homely living.
In planning homes for the well-to-do of to-day, homes of gener-
ous size and luxurious appointments, it is to be feared that both
architects and builders are at times at fault in their arrangement
of the kitchen and its subsidiary rooms. In their desire to pro-
duce a handsome scheme for the showier rooms, they have been
known to ignore the claims of that part of the anatomy of the
house which is below stairs or placed well out of the public gaze.
It would seem that to the kitchen was given such place and space
386 THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD.
In the case of a town house, built, let us say, on a lot not a corner
one, the location of the kitchen has limitations as to choice of ex-
posure to any particular point of the compass. It is desirable that
the exposure should be to the south or west or between the two.
There is no denying the sanitary result of direct sunlight aside from
the benefit of having the prevailing breezes for ventilation and our
kitchen must be light, sanitary and easily ventilated. In the house
in question, it will generally be located under the dining room or
somewhere in that story having service from the street. It will
probably be possible to get light from one side only. The windows
should be ample, close up to the ceiling and as nearly in the
center of the wall space as possible. To get cross ventilation is
the problem. This should be accomplished without making use
of the hall or other basement room by arranging a small air shaft
or flue on the side of room
opposite the windows. This shaft or
flue is not expected to carry off the smoke arising from cooking
strong side light on its top and at the same time not be directly
in a cross draught which would interfere with the fire. The so-
called French range, with black steel sides and nickel plated
its
o 2
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H
a 5
rfl
H _
tf O
s 5
390 THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD.
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OP TO-DAY. 391
and drain piping- exposed. It can be made far from ugly and any
repairs can be made without cutting of walls and floors. The table
can be arranged with convenient drawers for kitchen cutlery and
other necessary small implements; also a deep metal-lined drawer
for throwing refuse temporarily, to be emptied into the regular
metal can or barrel every day. A lower shelf will be found handy.
The top may be of wood or marble and have a narrow plate shelf
down the center about fifteen inches above it, carried on end
brackets and leaving the top open under it. The gas or electric
light fixture should be above the table with a side bracket above
the sink.
Very handsome refrigerators are in the market, having glass
or tile linings and compartments for every conceivable use. The
exteriors are of wood or tile and they are altogether a most sani-
tary place for the keeping of food. Some housekeepers prefer a
built-in box but there is little, if any, gain in going to that expense
as the portable ones meet every requirement. In the case of the
town house, the refrigerator may best be located in the hall between
the street entrance and the kitchen and handy to the latter. It
GENERAL VIEWS.
Residence of John A. McCall, Long Branch, N. J. Henry Edward Cregier, Architect.
AM ERIC AX RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY.
395
SOCIAL, HALL,.
Residence of John A. McCall, Long Branch, N. J. Henry Edward Cregier, Architect.
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 401
402 THE ARCHITECTURAL RECORD.
VIEW OF STAIRCASE.
Residence of John A. McCall, Long Branch, N. J. Henry Edward Cregier, Architect.
AMERICAN RESIDENCES OF TO-DAY. 403