One sunny day in June, the porch was getting underway!
Now for the rant: the state I live in is known for its rain complaints. I have seen many moldy, dry-rotted houses on the rainy side of the mountains. It did not take me long living here to wonder, why aren't porches part of the vernacular architecture? Specifically, wrap-around porches. They would extend the life of siding, keep the damp feeling down on the inside of the house, and allow the inmates of the house a dry place to walk around and get some exercise in the wet winter. As it is, not a lot of people venture out-of-doors when it is drizzly. A wrap-around porch could bring about healthier movement in wintertime.
Now, not having been here a hundred years ago, I might be completely mistaken in this judgement. Perhaps they did have wrap-around porches then, but they have since rotted away themselves and not been replaced. I know that the new houses have very small porches, if any, and most not more than a dark cave-like corridor to the front door. The rain is still a problem and the architecture has not reflected the solution.
On the other side of the mountains, where the sun shines most of the year, a deep porch is important for the shade and I think I see more porches around. Reminds me of that old Aesop's fable of the quest to get the man's coat...guess the sun still wins.
2 comments:
People stopped building porches when the television and a/c kept them comfortable inside and entertained. I agree that it is a miserable loss to not have porches. We live in a Queen Anne built in 1898. The porch and tower were removed sometime around 1949 to make it more "modern". Tragic! I hope you enjoy you lovely porch!
Eek! I hope you can re-build a porch on someday:) I can't imagine a Queen Anne without one!
The old folks out on the farm had "sleeping porches" too. I like the idea of a sleeping porch, where the mosquitos can't get in!
I've also seen glassed-in porches though it wasn't ever explained to me why they were glassed in. If it was a sun-room, it was so stacked high with extra stuff it wasn't working anymore! I suppose everyone needs a junk room and maybe enclosing un-used porches was a way to get them.
Thanks for the comment!
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