Photographs; Houses; Roofs; Dwellings; Hip roofs; Dormers; Porches; Gables; Mansard roofs; Porches; Trellises; Stone walls; Balustrades; Shutters; Dormers; Station wagons; Chimneys;
There are gabled dormer windows on two-sides of this large home with hip roof. The roof has fish-scale shingles. Three chimneys are visible on the roof. The gables feature bargeboard decoration. A covered front porch with balustrade and decorative...
This is the side view of large home with mansard roof and a tower. There are two large chimneys extending from the roofline. The windows feature decorative lintels with keystones and dark shutters. An oriel window projects from the side of the home...
Large pine trees rise high above this mansard roof home. Much of the front porch is blocked by the trees and bushes. The front entry porch is covered by a gabled roof with gable decoration. Seen on either side of the front entry porch are double...
On either end of the photograph, the picture is overexposed and some of the image is lost. In the photograph there is a mansard-roofed home with two prominent chimneys on the roofline. There are fish-scale shingles and pedimented dormers on the...
This is a mansard-roofed home with a large center gabled window with slightly curved sides leading all the way through the roofline. On either side of this centered gable, there are two flat-roofed bay windows that rest on the roof of the...
This photograph is slightly out of focus. It shows a small, mansard-roofed house. There is a set of stairs leading to the entry-door on the right side of the building. The grass in front of the house is overgrown and a large pine tree obscures the...
This is a black and white postcard showing the Old Fort Comfort Inn resort. The postcard shows a large pier extending into the water. There is a long pier with many people on it. There are also many people seen swimming in the water. A very small...
This is a view down a main street in Piermont, N.Y. There is a car parked on either side of the street further down the street. In the foreground, There is a two story house. The entire front of the house is demolished from a fire. The burned house...
This postcard is of a very large resort building known as "Fort Comfort". The building has a large covered porch stretching along its length. There are also awnings on several of the sections of the building. There are wide expansive stairways...
A long staircase leads up a hillside towards a large building.The building is four stories tall. There are three small dormer windows on the roof. A staircase on the right side leads up to the large covered porch that runs the length of the...
A 1940's-era automobile leads a parade. The automobile has large stars affixed to its front fender. The automobile is a convertible with the top down; there are several people seated in the automobile. Behind the automobile, there is a row of...
This three story, mansard roofed house was demolished to make room for the Thruway. As the Bell Memorial Home on Hillside Avenue, it was for 55 years a rest home for Episcopal clergy and families. Earlier it was the "Heart's Ease Cottage."
The elegant Duryea House had a central entryway with two stairways leading to the ivy-covered porch. The porch roof and the mansard roof are edged with a wrought iron grille
Only a concrete wall separates the Sparkill Creek from a building on Piermont Avenue in Piermont, NY. The mansard-roofed brick house is attached to a concrete block garage. The lower level has two sliding doors and a stovepipe protrudes from the...
Built c. 1875, this Mansard style home with its round capped dormers, double bracketed eaves, and dominating side tower crowned with a beautiful cupola, is one of the most charming in the Nyack area.
The architectural features of the small Mansard style house at 20 Sixth Avenue, Nyack, include rosette pattern shingles, double and single brackets, spandrels, and cusps.
This old house on upper Main Street in Nyack has a mansard roof, double brackets, and double balconies overlooking Nyack Brook. Most of the windows have been altered. It was a business called The Kayak of Nyack for many years and then became a...
Business districts; Stores & shops; Mansard roofs;
The four-story 1873 Onderdonk Block has a mansard roof with dormers, brackets used as details below the roof edge, and windows that have granite lintels and sills. On the street level are businesses.
This is the western end of the Onderdonk block, built in 1873. In 1996 the stores were occupied by Judith Charles, a woman's shop, and Herb Lack Paints, a hardware store.