-40%
Prarie Style small house, architectural drawings, open floor plan, PDF FILE
$ 7.91
- Description
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Description
This listing is for a PDF file emailed to you. Please include your email address at the time of your order. Please note there is NO return on PDF products.Brookfield Kindergarten - 1911
Building name:Â Â Â Brookfield Kindergarten
Designer/Architect: William Drummond
Date of construction: 1911
Location: Brookfield, Illinois
Style: Prairie Style
Number of sheets: 5 sheets measuring 18" x 24"
Sheet List
Site Plan, Notes
Floor Plan, 3/16"=1'-0"
3 sheets, Elevations and Sections, 3/16"=1'-0"
This listing is for architectural drawings only. Any photos shown in the description are informational only and not included in this package. To purchase paper prints go
HERE
. Please note there is NO return on PDF products.
***Please be sure to visit my
eBay store
to see 170+ more house plans in a variety of styles.***
Queene Coonley, who had earlier commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright to design her home, turned to William Drummond to design this jewel box of a Prairie Style kindergarten. Later interior partitions were added and it was converted into a house. These drawings show both the original state and many of the later elements.
As a work of art these prints are worth purchasing in their own right. For those of you interested in building a historically inspired house, these plans offer an excellent starting point. The main house itself has outside dimensions of approximately 63' x 75', including terraces.
If you enjoyed these house plans you may be interested in other
Prairie Style homes
in our collection.
SHIPPING:
Once your payment has cleared eBay your file will be emailed to your eBay listed email address and marked as "shipped". Please make certain your email service is capable of receiving attachments of at least 5 MB. Although I attempt to fulfill orders daily please allow up to 48 hours to receive your emailed file. Thank you.
IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO BUILD:
These plans are not complete architectural drawings as might be required by your local permitting agency and do not contain all the structural, waterproofing and other details and information necessary for construction. But your local builder or architect should be able to adapt these drawings and add to them as necessary. What they do provide is accurate design information about a REAL historic house, not a pseudo-historic tract house as you will find in the house plan magazines on your supermarket shelf.
The original drawings from which these dimensionally accurate scans were made are kept at the Historic American Building Survey, in the Library of Congress.
(PR008 pdf)
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