Siding and roofing richa wilson intermountain regional architectural historian kathleen snodgrass project leader s y r or n.
House siding 1950s.
What you should know about buying a house built in the 1950 s.
These houses have a great charm about them.
For example a house built in the 1700s would probably have a different kind of siding than one that was built in in the 1930s or 1950s.
The product that was available then compared to now is much different.
Sherwin william s offers a suburban modern preservation palette.
Fiber cement cedar ridge aluminum and vinyl siding were popular in the 1950s.
By the 1950s many manufacturers were producing hardboard siding but during the 1970s stricter policies enacted by the environmental protection agency led to many plant closures.
In each group the large block is for the overall body.
Vinyl siding was first introduced in the late 1950s by a manufacturing plant called crane plastics.
By the 1980s hardboard siding accounted for just 30 percent of the residential siding market and today that number has dipped to around 15 percent.
H u t g a nd ng l a ir.
With popular golds avocados sages and corals these exterior color palettes are a 50s enthusiast s dream.
The upper right block is for trim and the lower right block is for accenting.
Those deteriorating shingles could come down.
Short of re siding your house the best way to update the look is by repainting with more modern colors.
Vinyl siding too is also pretty easy to identify.
House built 1950 in old houses.
Figure 1 following national trends the forest service often used wood siding with a variety of profiles on frame buildings in the early 20th century.
Pvc based vinyl siding was introduced in the u s.
For both new construction and for remodeling.
The neighborhoods are well established and these homes are often more affordable than a newer house in a newer development.
Although asbestos was commonly used in exterior siding from the 1930s to the 1970s it was mixed with asphalt and cement not wood.
It feels like plastic is dyed the same color throughout and when pushing on the wall of a house it tends to flex.
In the 1950 s and 60 s began to overtake aluminum siding for building exterior wall coverings in the 1970 s and by the 1980 s was the dominant exterior siding material on residential structures in the u s.
Like masonite siding it is also usually labeled by the manufacturer or it may have a manufacturing code on the back side of the siding panel.
When siding the outside of a house it s a good idea to redo the siding in such a way that it matches the style and design of the house.