Featuring distinctive rooflines and facades saltbox style houses are an iconic example of american colonial architecture.
Salt box style roof.
Rather of sloping to the same degree one side includes the entire route to the house s first floor.
A saltbox roof is a design that was used extensively in the colonial era.
Saltbox roofs look like a patched gable style roof with two sides sloping outwards from a central ridge.
Now you will see this type of rooftop design on garages sheds and outbuildings rather than on homes.
However instead of sloping to the same length one side reaches all the way to the first.
Work with attention and plan every step of the construction from the very beginning.
We might call it the saltbox but there s no doubt this style is just perfect.
Building a saltbox roof is a complex project as it has certain particularities that cannot be found in other cases.
The flat front and central chimney are recognizable features but the asymmetry of the unequal sides and the long low rear roof line are the most distinctive features of a saltbox which takes its name from its resemblance to a wooden lidded box in which salt was once kept.
Today there are not a lot of newly constructed homes that have this type of roof design.
Salt box roofs feel like a painted gable style roof with two sides of a central ridge sloping outwards.
A salt box house defining feature is its roof.
A saltbox has just one story in the back and two stories in the front.