- Carport
A carport is a structure used to offer limited protection to
vehicles , primarily cars, from the elements. The structure can either be free standing or attached to a wall. Unlike most structures a carport does not have four walls, and is mostly commonly found with only two. Carports offer less protection than garages but allow for more ventilation.Quoting from the Carport Integrity Policy for the Arizona State Historic Preservation Office
As early as 1909, carports were used by the
Prairie School architectWalter Burley Griffin in his design for the Sloan House in Elmhurst, Illinois (Gebhard, 1991: 110). By 1913, carports were also being employed by other Prairie School architects such as the Minneapolis firm of Purcell, Feick & Elmslie in their design for a residence at Lockwood Lake, Wisconsin. In this instance, the carport was termed an “Auto Space” (Gebhard, 1991: 110). The late architectural historian David Gebhard suggested that the term “carport” originated from the feature’s use in 1930s Streamline Moderne residences (Gebhard, 1991: 107). This term, which entered popular jargon in 1939, stemmed from the visual connection between these streamlined residences and nautical imagery..... In the 1930s through the 1950s, carports were also being used by Frank Lloyd Wright in his Usonian Houses; an idea that he probably got from Griffin, a former associate.The term carport was first coined by renowned architect
Frank Lloyd Wright , when he began using the carport for the first of his "Usonian " homes; The house of Herbert Jacobs, built in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1936. ( http://www.usonia1.com )In describing the carport, he said to Mr. Jacobs, "A car is not a horse, and it doesn't need a barn." He then added, "Cars are built well enough now so that they do not require elaborate shelter." Looking back at life in 1936, it is easy to imagine automobiles prior to this time were not completely water tight; the era of robotic-assembly, advanced materials, and perfect closure lines were still 50 years in the future.
The carport was, therefore, a cheap and effective device for the protection of a car. Mr. Jacobs added, "Our cheap secondhand car had stood out all winter at the curb, often in weather far below zero (Fahrenheit). A carport was a downright luxury for it."
W. B. Sloane House, Elmhurst, Illinois in 1910
Floor Plans and Photo showing the first known home designed with a carport
* [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3603884-s816 Photo 1910]
* [http://www.nla.gov.au/apps/cdview?pi=nla.pic-vn3698166-sd&width=1200 First and Second Floor Plan]
* [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3603884a-s486 First Floor Plan]References
*Gebhard, David. “The Suburban House and the Automobile.” The Car and the City: The Automobile, the
*Built Environment and Daily Urban Life. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1991: 106 123.External links
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