Friday, August 12, 2016

Spanish Colonial Style Santa Barbara

Take an Architectural Tour of Santa Barbara

The cover of Spanish Colonial Style.

A new book examines the Spanish Colonial style that defines this California city

The red-tile roofs, white stucco walls, and wood-beam ceilings that have become synonymous with Santa Barbara’s Spanish-derivative architecture are owed as much to architects James Osborne Craig and Mary McLaughlin Craig, a husband-and-wife duo who restored and assembled many of the California city’s structures during the 1920s and ’30s in traditional Spanish form, as to the Spanish missionaries.
A new book produced in conjunction with the Santa Barbara Historical Society details the Craigs’ contributions to the coastal city, from extravagant private homes to civic buildings to courtyards. Spanish Colonial Style: Santa Barbara and the Architecture of James Osborne Craig and Mary McLaughlin Craig (Rizzoli, $55), anthologizes James Osborne Craig’s works spanning 1915 to 1922 and Mary McLaughlin Craig’s later embellishments (from 1923 until 1956), creating a fluid evolution of the aesthetic that made Santa Barbara architecturally relevant on an international scale.


Circa-1918 sketches show the designs for a home addition and gardener’s cottage in Montecito, California, inspired by Andalusian architecture. The simplistic design is reminiscent of farmhouses in Spain.


The Gantz House, in Montecito, is among the Craigs’ most accurate replication of a Spanish farmhouse, complete with white plaster walls, a red-tile roof, and a stately two-story entry hall.

James Osborne Craig’s renovation of the El Paseo plaza—originally the home of Santa Barbara commandant José de la Guerra and later converted into a mixed-use space for the city—was a defining moment in his architectural career. El Paseo’s courtyard, pictured here, was designed to reproduce an inviting Castilian-style outdoor space, draped in bougainvillea and lit with Colonial Spanish electric lanterns.


Inspired by Andalusian architecture, Montecito’s Emmor J. Miley House, crafted by Mary McLaughlin Craig, features white plaster walls with a sandstone-framed entryway and a black iron balcony, traditional to Spain.


The second Emmor J. Miley House, also designed by Craig, is even grander, with a sandstone exterior, stone windowsills, and ironwork on the windows. Inside, a balcony overlooks a central patio.


Plaza Rubio, a group of modest Spanish-style houses facing the Mission Santa Barbara, was devised in the mid-1920s and embodies the charm and color of the old-world detail for which the city has became known.


By the early 1930s Mary McLaughlin Craig had shifted away from the Spanish Colonial aesthetic toward Mediterranean and American styles. The Harry Drake House in Carpinteria, California, recalls Spanish influences in combination with Colonial American design.

For more information on this and the Montecito Luxury Real Estate Market click here to contact Susan Pate or visit MontecitoLifestyle.com.
   


7 comments:

  1. There are many cheaper brands in India that haven't yet matched up to the hype created by age old brands, even if their products are better in terms of quality and technology used. Fashion

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for this great post, i find it very interesting and very well thought out and put together. I look forward to reading your work in the future. Viking , Wolf, Dacor Stove & Range Repair Montecito

    ReplyDelete
  3. I am continually amazed by the amount of information available on this subject. What you presented was well researched and well worded in order to get your stand on this across to all your readers. instagram likes app download

    ReplyDelete
  4. I favor the actual publish. It truly is superb to discover a person explain in words out of your cardiovascular as well as high quality with this particular essential subject material might be very easily observed. professional stucco repair

    ReplyDelete
  5. You made such an interesting piece to read, giving every subject enlightenment for us to gain knowledge. Thanks for sharing the such information with us to read this... Spanish course

    ReplyDelete
  6. Each owner of Boone Hall plantation was an entrepreneur experimenting with different crops and methods and trying to figure out how to make money and deal with changes in the weather and economy. Colonial Dorchester Site

    ReplyDelete
  7. I wish more authors of this type of content would take the time you did to research and write so well. I am very impressed with your vision and insight. Colonial Dorchester Site

    ReplyDelete