Design snapshot: Salem historic texture
It’s easy to overlook something exquisite or noteworthy when it’s familiar. It’s worth training your eye, though, to stop and recognize good design at work. So I’m launching a new category with this posting in which I’ll share a “Design snapshot”.
The photo to the left captures part of the everyday architectural landscape in historic Salem, Massachusetts. The materials of this antique building elegantly perform their function while creating a richly textured composition.
The rectangular, coursed granite of the foundation holds the building up, and the apple-sized, perimeter stones facilitate drainage. In the process, each contrasts aesthetically with the other. One is linear, methodically stacked, and heavy; the other is rounded, informally piled, and light enough to collect and carry. The cream-colored, thick, bevel-edged, wooden, “water table” trim that runs above the stone foundation, and outside of it, provides a functional transition between the inset foundation below and the water-shedding clapboards above. It also provides a visual transition between the large, mottled, grey stones and the narrow, golden, hand-hewn wood siding. As the building grows taller above grade, windows provide view and light; their deep, thick sills shed water away from the siding. In addition, the windows punctuate the composition with contrasting transparency and cream-colored, wooden elements.
This age-old building’s individual components work together to perform and delight.
by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast