“C” is for Charleston single house. The single house is the building form most closely associated with eighteenth century Charleston architecture. It first appeared in the early eighteenth century and emerged as a favored residential form after the fire of 1740. The typical single house stands two or more stories in height and is built on a rectangular plan with its narrow end facing the street. Each floor has two rooms with a central stair-hall in between. Piazzas occupy the long wall facing the inside of the lot, and the chimneys are located on the opposite wall, in the rear of the house. One of the best examples is the Robert Pringle House at 70 Tradd Street. The Charleston single house is widely recognized as one of the most distinctive vernacular forms of architecture in the South.
“C” is for Charleston single house
