- Recognizing and identifying home design styles can be tricky. Here's a few easy ways to recognize nine of the most popular.
Ranch
Defining features: This style is often associated with being “quintessential” American home — it’s open and wide floor plan, attached garage and easy-to-access one-story layout made it the most popular style in the 40s and 50s as American families began moving out to the suburbs. Ranch-style homes have pitched roofs, wood or brick exteriors, and sliding doors that lead to large backyard spaces. Lastly, the homes are often shaped like “L”s or “U”s.rSnapshotPhotos / Shutterstock
Craftsman
Defining features: Architect and furniture designer Gustav Stickley is credited with creating the Craftsman (also known as Bungalow) style home during the Arts and Crafts Movement of the late 1800s and early 1900s. Stickley said this style of home is “a house reduced to it’s simplest form… its low, broad proportions and absolute lack of ornamentation gives it a character so natural and unaffected that it seems to… blend with any landscape.” Craftsman style homes are known for overhanging eaves, a low gabled roof, expansive front porches and tapered columns. The exterior is often made of a mix of wood, stucco, and stone, giving it a natural, understated look. The interior often has an open floor plan complete with built-in furniture, i.e. bookshelves, fireplaces and exposed wood beams.Artazum / Shutterstock.com
Cape Cod
Defining features: The Cape Cod style is based on the thatched cottages of England and originated with the colonialists of the early 1600s. This style of home is known for a wide, sturdy chimney, steep roofs and shutter windows — perfect for combating harsh Northeastern winters. Cape Cod-style homes are often one story, and the exteriors are often made of clapboard or brick.rSnapshotPhotos / Shutterstock
Shotgun
Defining Features: It’s said this style of home got its unique name from the fact you could stand in the doorway and shoot a bullet through the backdoor. Shotgun homes are slim and rectangular, and the rooms lead straight from one room to another until you reach the back of the home. Shotgun homes usually have a front porch and can be spruced up on the outside with brightly colored paint and ornamental decorations. This style of home was popular in the early 1900s due to the low cost and quick construction times.cdrin / Shutterstock
Tudor
Defining features: Just like the Cape Cod style home, Tudor style homes find their origins in England. Tudors are often two-stories and feature multiple multi-gabled roofs and timber framing. The exterior is made of brick or stone, and the home features large, gorgeous casement windows and sturdy chimneys. This style saw its heyday in the 1920s and 30s, but it remains a mainstay in many historical neighborhoods across the U.S.Susan Law Cain / Shutterstock
Victorian
Defining features: Victorian-style homes began their reign during the mid-1800s, when Queen Victoria took the throne in England. These homes are usually two (even three) stories and are known for elaborate brackets, spindles and patterned shingles. These homes also feature large porches, multiple wings and bays and towers.Buckeye Sailboat
Art Deco
Defining Features: Art Deco gained its popularity in the 1930s and reflected the modern, glamorous “Old Hollywood” feel of the time. The Art Deco style is known for its flat roof, stucco walls, geometric details and bright pops of color. This style is mainly used for commercial buildings, but you’ll be able to find homes that boast this style.Rachael Burke / Shutterstock
Mediterranean
Defining Features: This style of home is modeled after the “hacienda style” that originated in Central and Latin America. They also pull influences from Italian, Spanish and Greek architecture. Most Mediterranean style homes have red tiles with plastered exteriors and feature lush terraces, porticos, balconies and arches.cdrin / Shutterstock
Contemporary
Defining Features: Architects vary on they define contemporary homes — some say it simply refers to the current building style that favors energy efficiency, sustainable building materials, and blended living spaces.Breadmaker / Shutterstock