A flat roof with a parapet wall irregular and rounded edges on walls stucco surfaces and vigas round roof beams extending through walls to the exterior.
Pueblo architecture roof beams.
This architectural form enables the roof of each level to serve as a terrace for the level above.
The main features of pueblo homes include gigantic rounded adobe walls flat roofs that lack overhang heavy timbers or vigas that extend through the walls to provide roof support latillas or poles angled above the vigas rounded parapets that contain spouts for rain water simple windows and deep door and window openings.
Heavy doors ceiling beams and porch posts are a striking counterpart to the smooth walls typical of pueblo architecture.
Rising above the beehive buttresses and protruding roof beams are two wooden bell towers added in 1870.
In a typical pueblo building adobe blocks form the walls of each room as well as a central courtyard.
Spanish colonial pueblo architecture often called the santa fe style was inspired by a mixture of spanish colonial and simple indian pueblo forms.
If adobe is not used rounded corners irregular parapets and thick battered walls are used to simulate it.
An espadaƱa extending up from the face of the church with two bells in it combined with the blocky.
Buildings can be up to five stories tall.
The timbers used are called vigas and they re usually exposed at the ends.
Common features of the pueblo revival style include projecting wooden roof beams or vigas which sometimes serve no structural purpose corbels curved often stylized beam supports and latillas which are peeled branches or strips of wood laid across the tops of vigas to create a foundation usually supporting dirt or clay for a roof.
Pueblo style architecture seeks to imitate the appearance of traditional adobe construction though more modern materials such as brick or concrete are often substituted.
Usually each floor is set back from the floor below so that a given building resembles a stepped pyramid.
The exposed beam ends projecting from the outside of the wall are a defining characteristic of pueblo architecture and spanish colonial architecture in new mexico and often replicated in modern pueblo revival architecture.