Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1988-06, Page 67BAKER'S NURSERY Specializing in: Hardy Shade Trees Beautiful Maples Emerald Queen Norway Crimson King Columnar Green Ash, Mountain Ash, Linden, Crab Apple Bare Root, Potted, Bagged and Burlapped, and Wire Baskets Baker's Nursery Quality Merchandise At A Fair Price R.R. 2, Bayfield, Ont. 519-482-9995 Also a complete line of evergreen and fruit trees 66 THE RURAL VOICE RURAL HERITAGE ROMANESQUE and RICHARDSONIAN ROMANESQUE architecture — part of a series on rural architecture from the Stratford -Perth Archives. The Romanesque Revival style, popular during the latter half of the 1800s, borrows features from Roman Classical architecture. Romanesque buildings are massive, overpowering structures with large doors and windows emphasized by being set into the walls. The most important feature of Romanesque Revival architecture is round -arched doorways or large, round - arched picture windows. The round - headed doorways usually rest on squat, Roman columns or heavy piers. Piers are reinforced areas spread across the wall in intervals to provide support. Roman columns, simpler than Greek columns, are also popular adorn- ments. The decoration on the frieze (the horizontal band along the top of the column) usually has a floral motif, but Inspired by Henry Hobson Richardson: Perth County Courthouse, Stratford, 1885-1887. Presbyterian Church, Shakespeare, Ont., 1903: Built to impress — and last. other modest details were used. (Greek friezes are usually adorned with more intricate patterns of fruit and leaves.) Three-dimensional columns away from the wall act either as a structural support or a decoration. When a column appears to be a part of the wall, it is strictly for adornment and is called a pilaster. Recessing the brick to form pilasters was a popular method of achieving this decoration. Small columns or colonettes are also used, especially as window adornment. RICHARDSONIAN ROMANESQUE In the 1880s, Henry Hobson Richardson, an American architect, enhanced the Romanesque features of buildings to make them even more robust and overpowering. Richardson was known mostly for his church designs in the U.S., but his work greatly affected Romanesque Revival archi- tecture. His style was known as Richardsonian Romanesque. In Canada, Richardsonian Roman- esque -inspired architecture could be found 20 years after the style was