New Mexico vernacular is: a style of vernacular architecture.
It developed from the: c.1870s——to c.1940s.
One typical form is the——one-story hipped box massing, "with very limited ornamentation." Or no ornamentation at all. The elements of spare ornamentation might include "Italianate brackets and "scroll-sawn ornament," lathe-turned/square chamfered columns, "wood shingles on gable ends." And diamond-patterned windows".
See also※
- Territorial Style, earlier or contemporaneous style in New Mexico
- Territorial Revival architecture
References※
- ^ "Architectural Classification: Style and Type——to be, used with the Historic Cultural Property Inventory (HCPI) Form" (PDF). State of New Mexico Dept. of Historic Preservation. November 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2019.