22 
HOUSE & GARDEN 
L Aun 
6LD S.OOK 
KITCHtB 
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bLD ioon 
BATH 
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HALL 
HALL 
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Jurt i Fuloi Floosc 
By far the most interesting and unusual ele¬ 
ments on the second floor, as on the first, are 
the stairs and the well they create 
The door has been designed with care to re¬ 
produce both the line and feeling of the old 
Southern Colonial models 
The position and nature of the stairs—a cir¬ 
cular stairs from the front door-is a dis¬ 
tinctive feature of the first floor plan 
Red brick faces the house. The trim is 
white and the shutters green. It is an 
adapted Southern Colonial style 
THE RESIDENCE OF 
JOHN L. WAY, ESQ., AT 
HARTFORD, CONN. 
A. Raymond Ellis, architect 
THE SOUTHERN COLONIAL 
HOME OF T. A. SMYTH, ESQ., 
AT RICHMOND, VA. 
W. Duncan Lee, architect 
The Way house is a successful 
adaptation of the English type to 
American suburban or semi-sub¬ 
urban conditions. Walls are 
stucco and the roof shingles laid 
in the attractive thatch form 
KITCHCN- 
CHAMbLR. 
Openness characterizes the down¬ 
stairs, with resultant abundance 
of light and ventilation through 
the hall and living-room 
JturABLTH/ 
•CHAM MR 
OWNCE>. 
CflAMftEB.- 
I he dining-room is in the rear or 
the house, overlooking the gar¬ 
den. The living-room is house 
depth, opening on a porch 
CHAMbtC 
■ yiTTING- 
■ytCONJ) rt-OOE. • PCAN 
Plan 
An Upstairs sitting-room-the re¬ 
turn of a good old family custom 
-is noticeable on the plans of 
the second floor 
■ : ) 
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