17 ways to add curb appeal to your mid-century NJ house!

Mid-century homes come in all styles and sizes – generally with either “ranch style” or “colonial style” elements. The house above: A real mix of the two, and the exterior touches really give it…stature, even despite its small size – just 1,000 square feet. There is so much you can do to add great curb appeal to your post-war ranch, cape, colonial, bungalow, or split. Here are seventeen ideas to transform your NJ mid-century home into a modern and appealing structure.

1. The cupola above the garage is a great feature and focus point. We really like adding a cupola for the visual interest that they provide.
2. The tree at the left, and that shrub at the left corner are “higher” than other greenery. Feng shui says that looking at a house, the left side is the “dragon” side that protects the house – trees and shrubs should be higher here. The right side is the “phoenix” side – lower to the ground here, please. It also works because we read left to right.
3. Not exactly shown here, but one other principle for exterior landscaping is to bring the beds along the house out the full height of your facade. That is, if the facade of your house (not including the roof) is 9 feet high…bring your beds out 9 feet. This “grounds” the house within the landscaping quite nicely. The beds don’t seem small.
4. Let your windows breathe. Don’t have shrubbery covering them and if you do, trim it back.
5. Notice how the window treatments contribute to curb appeal. There are horizontal blinds with tape at each window. The draperies are all a light yellow. Harmony in repetition can make a big impact.
6. If you have a house like this, stay with the wide clapboards. The scale is so nice.
7. And of course, that structure at the front door is so welcoming, and the brick planter makes a nice addition.
8. Add shutters: Match them to your roof color. Note how they are sized vertically to also encompass the trim underneath the window. The rule of thumb for width is to take half the window width – as if the shutters actually could be used.
9. Garage door: Matched to the shutter trim color.
10. And notice how the stone trim under the bay also is that nice warm sandy brown.
11. Consider using the front gable to introduce another trim color and another material. And while this may really seem obsessive – this illustrator has imagined that the linings on all the draperies are lined in the same fabric and orange-y color, complementing the gable.
12. Hard to see, but there is dentil molding along the cornice of the bay window.
13. Finally here, note the use of the fence at the left – the trellis at the door – and the trellis at the far right. These are nice hardscape touches that add interest to this exterior (and the others shown).
14. Mix the materials used on your exterior. Looking left to right, notice how the bedroom window is edged and “sectioned off” from the shingle siding….see that little bathroom glass-block window with three horizontal trim pieces?…at the entry way, they’ve used vertical siding… and of course the stone makes a nice horizontal statement then rising to create a flower box.
15. In fact, it’s important to pause and underscore the use of materials that running horizontally along ranch-style homes. Ranch homes are long and low to the ground…they have a horizontal profile. Adding “footwalls” or “kneewalls” of brick or stone are a great way to emphasize the horizontal profile. In addition, you often see siding that runs half-way up the sides of a ranch home – this also can split it in two horizontally. In addition, these techniques add visual interest by introducing another material to differentiate a ranch-box. I will add, though, in thinking about doing these kinds of changes, scale becomes very important.
16. Of course, the entry way structure itself makes a welcoming statement. Notice how its roofline extends around the right-hand side of the house, almost like an awning.
17. Finally, I like how the chimney is painted white like the siding of the house.

To have your trusted NJ siding and roofing contractor, M&M Construction Specialist, review your home and give you ideas on how to update it, call us at 908-378-5951 or visit www.mmbuilds.com.

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