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The Brickyard House is an unusual and beautiful Foursquare
Romanesque brickwork house. It is Foursquare in that the house is mainly
a square shape with four closely sized rooms, symmetrical form, hipped
roof, front porch, and upper dormer windows. It is Romanesque in its
having grand Roman-arched windows. It is unusual to see these two styles
combined, with one looking forward into the modern future (Foursquare),
and the other looking back into the medieval past (Romanesque). This
unique landmark is made of several kinds of pressed and fancy shaped
brick, as if meant to show off the product of the Golden Pressed &
Fire Brick Works it served a century ago. Shaped facy bricks were among
the innovations which brought this brick works to national prominence.
Exterior
Restoration Drawings
East
Elevation (from today's driveway)
West
Elevation (from Catamount Drive)
North
Elevation (back of the house)
South
Elevation (front of the house)
Plans created by Donelson Architecture
of Golden
The 7 Forms
of "Shaped Fancy Brick"
Can you find them all in the house?
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Bull-Nosed |
Water Table |
"Ornate" |
"Angular" |
"Quarterpipe" |
Corbelled |
Cornice |
The unique ornamental brickwork of the Brickyard
House was manufactured by the Berg brick shaping machine over 100
years ago, purchased by the Golden Pressed & Fire Brick Company
in 1901.
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A Look Inside
Here are two views of the interior of the Brickyard House.
At left is a look inside the Living Room, a feature 3-window
front room of the house. Above the view looks toward the front
door in the Parlor and through the doorway into the Living Room.
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Hidden Surprises
of the Brickyard House

False Upstairs
The Brickyard House is made to look like it has an upper story,
but looks can be deceiving! Upstairs nobody ever intended to
finish it, with rafters going behind the windows, no staircase,
and original electrical conduit strung everywhere.
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Hidden Passage
If you look all around the house it would seem there's no way
to get to the fake upstairs, but there is. The way upstairs
is through the a closet, with a ladder hidden inside where you'd
least expect to go upstairs.
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Fake Chimney
At the northeast corner of the main building stood a tall,
stout chimney, which upon taking apart revealed not only that
it had two chambers, but that one of them was never used at
all. It was at the house dining room.
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No Mirror Image
The curve topped water table bricks only had one corner type
made, with no opposite directional design available like corners
above and below. As a result, workers then and now needed to
chop adjoining bricks in half to make the coursework proceed
in the normal overlapping way.
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It's NOT An Addition!
But we're meant to think it is. The flat topped rear of the
house is actually an original projection of the place, designed
to look like an addition, but fallen away plaster inside shows
where shaped bricks of an "original" rear wall should
be, but are instead a plain wall, a true giveaway.
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