Classic Cottage Plans from the Parkersville Collection

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These house designs are a
showcase of the rural homes that once dotted our Southern coasts and
traveled from there across the country with Western settlement. |
Charlotte
Corbin’s Cottage, above, and the William Leigh House, below, are
part of a remarkable group of designs that was created to
provide new homes for the landmark historical community of Isle
of Hope, near Savannah, Georgia.
Builder Magazine noted that the “houses are virtually
indistinguishable from the existing island homes.” When I
visited Isle of Hope, I had a hard time telling these new
cottages from the old ones that preceded them by a hundred years
and more.

The houses are a
showcase of the rural designs that once dotted our Southern
coasts and traveled from there across the country with Western
settlement. Styles include vernacular versions of Victorian,
Greek Revival, French Colonial, Craftsman and Low Country folk
cottages, like the ones shown here, that are so simple that they
have no style name.
The homes vary in
size and layout, from 1260 sf to 3760 sf, and from one to three
floors high. Bedrooms might all be upstairs, all downstairs or
on both floors. All houses have plenty of storage, modern
kitchens and baths. Most have fireplaces and walk-in closets.
When the designs,
by architect Gerry Cowart of the Cowart Coleman Group, in
Savanah, were first built, they got so much attention from the
media and prospective homeowners that a presentation portfolio
was created to sell copies of the blueprints to the public. That
was back in the 1990s, before the Internet became the primary
marketplace for building plans.
The consequence
of the timing is that you’ll have to order a copy of the
portfolio, by mail, to see and appreciate all of the plans. So,
if you’re on the Internet now, looking for building plans
because your concrete contractor is starting tomorrow morning,
the Parkersville Collection is not for you. However, if you’re
interested in finding examples of the careful detailing that
produces the best traditional homes, by all means order the
portfolio. It will be well worth your time.
Visit the Parkersville Collection website
to order their portfolio or to read more about it. While you’re
there, click on the button that reads “More on Homes.” You’ll be
taken to a page that offers you a photo gallery of the different
homes and a little more information on each. You still won’t see
floor plans, but you will be entertained while you’re waiting
for your mail carrier.