{"id":2514,"date":"2024-03-31T23:06:18","date_gmt":"2024-03-31T22:06:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.skelmorlievillas.co.uk\/?page_id=2514"},"modified":"2024-04-04T21:41:53","modified_gmt":"2024-04-04T20:41:53","slug":"architectural-glosary","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.skelmorlievillas.co.uk\/architectural-glosary\/","title":{"rendered":"Architectural Glossary"},"content":{"rendered":"

Glossary of terms<\/h4>\n

The following listing is based on Historic Scotland’s Glossary of Architectural terms at historicenvironment.scot<\/a> and augmented with additional architectural, art and design terms.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/section>\n

Adamesque:<\/strong>
\nFollowing the design principles or details used by the 18th century family of classical architects, William, John, James and Robert Adam.<\/p>\n

Architrave:<\/strong>
\nThe lowest of the three main divisions of the classical entablature, varying according to the order employed; moulded surround to an opening or recess.<\/p>\n

Arris:<\/strong>
\nSharp edge at the meeting of two surfaces.<\/p>\n

Art Deco:
\n<\/strong>A style of visual art, architecture and design taking its name from the ‘Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes’ held in Paris in 1925. Its distinguishing features are sleek stylised forms often with a streamlined look. The period lasted from the 1920s through the 1930s.<\/p>\n

Art Nouveau:
\n<\/strong>A style of art, architecture and applied art inspired by matural forms such as the sinuous curves of plants and flowers often using modern materials such as iron, glass and ceramics. It was popular between 1890 and 1910.<\/p>\n

Arts and Crafts:<\/strong>
\nStyle of design focusing on craftmanship, material quality, use of local material, often reviving vernacular or traditional forms.<\/p>\n

Ashlar:<\/strong>
\nMasonry of large blocks in regular courses worked to even faces and carefully squared edges: the stones themselves are called ashlars and may have a dressed finish.<\/p>\n

Astragal:<\/strong>
\nWooden glazing bar used to support the glass panes of a window.<\/p>\n

Balustrade:<\/strong>
\nA parapet or stair rail composed of uprights supporting a coping or rail.<\/p>\n

Band Course:<\/strong>
\nMasonry band which encircles a building wholly or in part usually unmoulded.<\/p>\n

Bargeboard:<\/strong>
\nBoards placed at the incline of a gable to hide the ends of the roof timbers, often decoratively treated.<\/p>\n

Base:<\/strong>
\nThe lowest moulding of any structure.<\/p>\n

Batter:<\/strong>
\nThe inward incline of an external wall surface, usually at the base, the thickness of
\nthe wall being progessively diminished.<\/p>\n

Bay:<\/strong>
\nA vertical alignment of key elements in a wall such as doors or windows which may also project or recess.<\/p>\n

Beton Brut:<\/strong>
\nRaw concrete left in its natural state after the formwork has been removed, also known as board-marked concrete.<\/p>\n

Blocking Course:<\/strong>
\nPlain course forming a low parapet above a cornice usually screening a gutter.<\/p>\n

Brattishing:<\/strong>
\nIn roofs, the ornamental cresting of cast or wrought-iron crowning a roof, but sometimes also found applied to cornices and other ornamental features.<\/p>\n

Broached:<\/strong>
\nOf masonry, stonework worked to a horizontally or diagonally furrowed surface; usually on ashlar with a margin draft at the edge.<\/p>\n

Brutalist:<\/strong>
\nArchitectural style appearing in the 1950s and 1960s featuring exposed concrete and emphasising bold structural forms.<\/p>\n

Canted Bay:
\n<\/strong>A canted bay window has a flat front and angled sides. The number of bays is defined by the number of windows in a horizontal line across the fa\u00e7ade.<\/p>\n

Capital:<\/strong>
\nThe crowning element of a column, colonette or pilaster, usually moulded or sculptured.<\/p>\n

Casement:<\/strong>
\nIn windows, a side-hung hinged light.<\/p>\n

Chamfer:<\/strong>
\nVery narrow face created when an arris is cut at an angle, usually 45 but sometimes hollow (ie concave) or ovolo.<\/p>\n

Cherry Caulking:<\/strong>
\nTreatment of masonry joints in which small stones are inserted into the mortar.<\/p>\n

Chimneystack:<\/strong>
\nThe external housing at wallhead of chimney flues.<\/p>\n

Close:<\/strong>
\nPassageway giving access to a number of houses or buildings; in an urban context usually but not always pedestrian, in steadings used as vehicular passage or pend.<\/p>\n

Column:<\/strong>
\nUpright structural member, usually circular in section.<\/p>\n

Conservatory:<\/strong>
\nGreenhouse or glazed extension as garden room.<\/p>\n

Cornice:<\/strong>
\nThe projecting uppermost member of the classical entablature; in isolation used as the crowning feature of external walls, or as the demarcation of an attic storey; or at windowheads, over shops etc; and internally at the junction of wall and ceiling.<\/p>\n

Crowsteps:<\/strong>
\nA stepped arrangement at the head of a gable leading to a chimney stack or gablehead.<\/p>\n

Crenelated:<\/strong>
\nA building, wall or archway which has battlements \/castellation.<\/p>\n

Cruck-framed:<\/strong>
\nForm of vernacular roof construction in which the roof is carried on pairs of naturally curved timbers or crucks joined at the ridge and combining the functions of upright post and rafter (full crucks) or embedded into the wallhead (upper crucks).<\/p>\n

Cupola:<\/strong>
\nA small dome like structure on top of a building, crowning a roof or dome. Often used to provide lookouts or admit light and air into the interior of a building.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/section>\n

Dado:<\/strong>
\nThe lower portion of an internal wall above the plinth or skirting board and beneath the dado or chair rail, sometimes of plaster but often panelled timber.<\/p>\n

Dentil Course:<\/strong>
\nMember of cornice below the main projecting member composed of rectangular blocks tightly spaced like teeth.<\/p>\n

Doocot:<\/strong>
\nDovecot or pigeon house.<\/p>\n

Dormer:<\/strong>
\nWindow breaking above the eaves at wallhead or set in the roof.<\/p>\n

Droved:<\/strong>
\nOf masonry, horizontally furrowed finish, usually on ashlar, popular in later 18th and early 19th centuries. See also broached.<\/p>\n

Dry Dash:<\/strong>
\n20th century method of harling in which the aggregate is dashed on dry, and not incorporated into the mix (see also harl).<\/p>\n

Eaves:<\/strong>
\nOverhanging edge of a roof.<\/p>\n

Entablature:<\/strong>
\nCollective name for the three horizontal members (architrave, frieze and cornice) above a column, in treatment, as a division between storeys or as an impost band at an arcade.<\/p>\n

Fanlight:<\/strong>
\nGlazed area above door; if rectangular rather than semi-circular, semi-elliptical or segmental, more correctly a transom-light.<\/p>\n

Fenestration:<\/strong>
\nThe windows of a property.<\/p>\n

Fleche:<\/strong>
\nSpirelet of timber and lead rising from a roof ridge rather than a tower.<\/p>\n

Forestair:<\/strong>
\nExternal stone stair, usually to 1st floor level.<\/p>\n

Gablet:<\/strong>
\nSmall gable-shaped feature over an opening or recess.<\/p>\n

Harl:<\/strong>
\nScottish form of roughcast in which the mixture of the aggregate (small even- sized pebbles) and binding material (in traditional harl, sand and lime) is dashed onto masonry wall; in traditional harls the aggregate is in the mix (wet dash) non-traditional 20th century harls the aggregate is dashed on seperately (dry dash).<\/p>\n

Hoodmould:<\/strong>
\nProjecting moulding over an arch or lintel designed to throw off water.<\/p>\n

Horns:<\/strong>
\nSmall upstands or downstands in windows from the meeting rails at the vertical members of the sash frame.<\/p>\n

Horse Mill:<\/strong>
\nCircular or polygonal building built to contain machinery driven by horses (horse engine), usually for the purposes of a threshing machine.<\/p>\n

Ice House:<\/strong>
\nVaulted or domed chamber banked over with earth which was filled with ice for domestic or commerical purposes.<\/p>\n

International:<\/strong>
\nStyle of simple cubic modern asymmetrical designs, usually white and unadorned, Style characterised by windows in horizontal bands and open ground plans.<\/p>\n

Kiln:<\/strong>
\nIn a mill, kiln barn or maltings building, that part of the building used for drying grain, identifiable by its having a furnace, a funnel leading to a metal floor and a vent in its roof.<\/p>\n

Louvred:<\/strong>
\nTreatment of overlapping boards angled to allow ventilation but to keep the ran out; used at belfry stages, persiennes, tanneries, barns etc.<\/p>\n

Lying Panes:<\/strong>
\nPanes of glass which are horizontally rather than vertically proportioned, fashionable in the period 1815-50.<\/p>\n

Mansard Roof:<\/strong>
\nFour-pitch roof with a steep lower pitch and a shallower upper pitch on each side.<\/p>\n

Margins:<\/strong>
\nMargin framing an opening or emphasising the angle of a building; most are raised (usually adopted when the building was to be harled but sometimes used decoratively) but some are chamfered and some are backset (ie recessed from the plane of the harl or render).<\/p>\n

Mews:<\/strong>
\nStabling, in an urban context.<\/p>\n

Modillion:<\/strong>
\nSmall bracket, sometimes scrolled, sometimes block-like, set at regular intervals in the soffit of a cornice.<\/p>\n

Mullion:<\/strong>
\nUpright member dividing the lights of a window.<\/p>\n

Mutule:<\/strong>
\nSmall flat slabs at the soffit of the cornice of a Doric entablature and positioned above the triglyph, if any; often used as a wallhead cornice without full entablature.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/section>\n

Ogee:<\/strong>
\nDouble curve composed of two curves in opposite directions without a break; used on both roofs and arches.<\/p>\n

Pediment:<\/strong>
\nClassical form of corniced gable or gablet used at openings as well as a termination to roof structures.<\/p>\n

Pend:<\/strong>
\nOpen-ended passageway through a building; usually vehicular (as against a close which is usually pedestrian).<\/p>\n

Piended:<\/strong>
\nHipped roofed.<\/p>\n

Pilaster:<\/strong>
\nThe flat version of a column, consisting of a slim rectangle projecting from a wall; used also as plain piers or pilasters without classical orders which are more correctly termed pilaster strips.<\/p>\n

Pilotis:<\/strong>
\nSlender vertical posts supporting overhanging architecture, charcteristic of Modern Movement design post-1945.<\/p>\n

PlateGlass:<\/strong>
\nLarge sheets of glass cast in plates and polished, introduced from 1838 onwards.<\/p>\n

Platt:<\/strong>
\nPlatform, broad doorstep, landing on stair, cantilevered stone gallery access to tenement flats.<\/p>\n

Pointing:<\/strong>
\nThe treatment with mortar of exposed joints in masonry or brickwork.<\/p>\n

Quoins:<\/strong>
\nStones larger than those of which a wall is composed, or better shaped, and forming the corners of walls or door and window openings: if they project they are described as raised, those with chamfered angles being referred to as rusticated.<\/p>\n

Raked:<\/strong>
\nAngled.<\/p>\n

Render:<\/strong>
\nSmooth coating of cement over masonry.<\/p>\n

Reveal:<\/strong>
\nThe inward plane of a door or window opening between the edge of the external wall and the window or door frame.<\/p>\n

Rubble:<\/strong>
\nMasonry which is not fully dressed; can be of boulders; or of random rubble retaining in some degree the natural shape of the stone; or of squared rubble in which the stones are roughly squared and may be either coursed or snecked.\u00a0Variations in the coursing is brought about by the use of small filler stones or snecks.<\/p>\n

Rustication:<\/strong>
\nTreatement of masonry in which the joints are sunk, usually in a V (chamfered rustication) but sometimes square; can have varied decorative treatments, eg with rock redded or vermiculated panels, or frosted in which the blocks appear as coated icicles.<\/p>\n

Sash and Case:<\/strong>
\nForm of window in which the glazing slides vertically in two parrallel frames\u00a0 within the case, the upper sliding outward of the lower.<\/p>\n

Skew:<\/strong>
\nSloping tabling, sometimes coped, finishing a gable which is upstanding from the plane of the roof.<\/p>\n

Skewputt:<\/strong>
\nBottom end of skew or crowstepped gable which projects from the wallhead, usually in a cavetto.<\/p>\n

Snecked:<\/strong>
\nForm of rubble construction composed of squared stones in which the coursing is varied by small filler stones or snecks.<\/p>\n

Soffit:<\/strong>
\nThe underside of a cornice, stair or lintel; that of an arch is more correctly an intrados.<\/p>\n

Stall Riser:<\/strong>
\nIn a shopfront, the panels below the display window’s cill.<\/p>\n

String:<\/strong>
\nA shallow moulding continued across a whole facade which may be defined by Course its position, eg cill course or impost course.<\/p>\n

Stugged:<\/strong>
\nOf masonry stone work, its surface picked to a consistent pattern, commonly employed from the mid-19th century onwards.<\/p>\n

Swept:<\/strong>
\nRoof window formed by sweeping a section of the roof up from the main plane Dormer at a slacker pitch; also known as a catslide dormer.<\/p>\n

System built:<\/strong>
\nTerm used for pre-fabricated, mass-produced construction post-1945.<\/p>\n

Thackstane:<\/strong>
\nStone weathering projecting over the roof cladding at the base of a chimney, in its original use over thatch.<\/p>\n

Tracery:<\/strong>
\nPattern of pierced open stonework in a Gothic or early Renaissance window; in Georgian or post-Georgian buildings may be of wood and may even be part of a window sash.<\/p>\n

Transom:<\/strong>
\nHorizontal member dividing a window opening.<\/p>\n

Truss:<\/strong>
\nThe triangular frames bearing a roof.<\/p>\n

Verandah:<\/strong>
\nOpen shelter or gallery around a building with a lean-to roof carried on verticals of timber or iron.<\/p>\n

Weatherboarding:
\nForm of wall cladding composed of overlapping horizontal boards on a timber framework.<\/p>\n

Wet Dash:<\/strong>
\nTraditional type of harl in which the aggregate of small, evenly-sized pebbles is incorporated into the mix.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/section>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"yoast_head":"\nArchitectural Glossary - skelmorlievillas.co.uk<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Architectural Glossary of terms and definitions of terms used in SkelmorlieVillas.co.uk website for villas built in Skelmorlie, Ayrshire, UK.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.skelmorlievillas.co.uk\/architectural-glosary\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_GB\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Architectural Glossary - skelmorlievillas.co.uk\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Architectural Glossary of terms and definitions of terms used in SkelmorlieVillas.co.uk website for villas built in Skelmorlie, Ayrshire, UK.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.skelmorlievillas.co.uk\/architectural-glosary\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"skelmorlievillas.co.uk\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2024-04-04T20:41:53+00:00\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Estimated reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"9 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.skelmorlievillas.co.uk\/architectural-glosary\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.skelmorlievillas.co.uk\/architectural-glosary\/\",\"name\":\"Architectural Glossary - 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