telescope house
English
editNoun
edittelescope house (plural telescope houses)
- A house with multiple extensions connected serially, decreasing in size.
- 1940, Maryland Writers' Project, Maryland, a Guide to the Old Line State (Federal Works Agency, 1940) [1]
- The need for space to house an increasing family, or an increasing prosperity, also resulted in a type of building Marylanders call a ‘telescope house.’
- 1978, James A. Michener, Chesapeake, Chapter "Refuge"
- As they passed beneath Peace Cliff he observed Mr. Steed looking with some interest at the telescope house, then quickly looking away, but he attached no significance to the incident.
- 2002, 100 Of the World's Best Houses (Images Publishing, 2002) p. 326
- The “telescope house” was common to eastern Pennsylvania, especially in the utopian communities that gathered there more than a century ago.
- 2007, Janelle McCulloch, editor, In Residence: McInturff Architects[2], Images Publishing, page 110:
- Our solution builds on the classic mid-Atlantic telescope house in plan and section, reaching out and up into the trees.
- 2012, John J. Cullinane, Maintaining and Repairing Old and Historic Buildings, John Wiley & Sons, page 113:
- The Lee-Fendall House is a “telescope” house, which is a vernacular piece of architecture developed on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
- 1940, Maryland Writers' Project, Maryland, a Guide to the Old Line State (Federal Works Agency, 1940) [1]