Hipped Roof

A hip roof, hip-roof or hipped roof, is a type of roof where all sides slope downwards to the walls, usually with a fairly gentle slope. Thus it is a house with no gables or other vertical sides to the roof. A square hip roof is shaped like a pyramid. Hip roofs on the houses could have two triangular sides and two trapezoidal ones. A hip roof on a rectangular plan has four faces. They are almost always at the same pitch or slope, which makes them symmetrical about the centerlines. Hip roofs have a consistent level fascia, meaning that a gutter can be fitted all around. Hip roofs often have dormer slanted sides.

Read more about Hipped Roof:  Construction, Use, Advantages and Disadvantages

Other articles related to "hipped, roof, hipped roof":

Culture and Sightseeing - Buildings - Senheim (main Centre)
... building, 19th century Am Gestade 55 – building with hipped mansard roof, marked 1786, hotel porch Brunnenstraße – warriors’ memorial, pylon with lion ...
Bruttig-Fankel - Culture and Sightseeing - Buildings - Bruttig
... Moselufer 10 – timber-frame house, partly solid, sided, half-hipped roof, 18th century Am Moselufer 23 – plastered timber-frame house, partly solid, half-hipped ...
Hipped Roof - Variants - Rhenish Helm or Helm Roof
... A pointed roof seen on a spire or a tower, oriented so that it has four gable ends ... See Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin, Sompting, Speyer Cathedral or Limburg Cathedral ...
Theisbergstegen - Culture and Sightseeing - Buildings - Godelhausen
... three-sided estate, 1870/1871 building with half-hipped roof, two-gated barn Bergstraße 4 – Quereinhaus (a combination residential and commercial house divided for these two purposes down the middle ...
Altweidelbach - Culture and Sightseeing - Buildings
... Baroque aisleless church, marked 1761 Hauptstraße 1 – building with half-hipped roof, partly slated timber framing, about 1800 Hauptstraße/corner of Heider Weg – cast-iron fountain basin ...

Famous quotes containing the word roof:

    Nor does the man sitting by the hearth beneath his roof better escape his fated doom.
    Aeschylus (525–456 B.C.)