01/17/2026
"ROOF SHAPES AND STYLES"
A visual reference chart for architectural and constructive terminology. Featuring 12 distinct 3D models of small structures, each demonstrating a specific roofing style.
The presentation uses a clean, instructional layout with a rustic, wooden background. Here is a detailed breakdown of the roof types shown:
COMMON RESIDENTIAL STYLES
🔸 Gable: Perhaps the most common roof type, featuring two sloping sides that meet at a ridge, creating a triangular shape at the ends.
🔸 Hip: A roof where all four sides slope downwards to the walls, usually with a fairly gentle slope and no vertical ends.
🔸 Mansard: A four-sided gambrel-style hip roof characterized by two slopes on each of its sides with the lower slope, punctured by dormer windows, at a steeper angle than the upper.
🔸 Saltbox: An asymmetrical gable roof with one side much longer than the other, often seen in colonial-style architecture.
INDUSTRIAL AND BARN STYLES
🔸 Gambrel: Often called a "barn roof," this is a two-sided roof with two slopes on each side. The upper slope is shallow, while the lower is steep.
🔸 Monitor: Features a raised central ridge with a set of windows (clerestory) running along the top, common in barns to provide light and ventilation.
🔸 Shed: A simple, single-slope roof surface. It is often used for additions or smaller outbuildings.
UNIQUE AND DECORATIVE STYLES
🔸 A-Frame: A steep, triangular roof that extends all the way to the ground (or near it), serving as both the roof and the walls of the structure.
🔸 Butterfly: An "inverted" gable roof that slopes inward toward the center, resembling the wings of a butterfly. This is often used in modern architecture to collect rainwater.
🔸 Bonnet: Similar to a hip roof but with a change in slope; the lower part of the roof flares out at a shallower angle, often to provide shade for a porch.🔸 Domed and Arched: These represent curved roofing. The Domed roof is hemispherical (often seen on silos or gazebos), while the Arched (or barrel) roof is a continuous semi-cylinder.
VISUAL COMPOSITION
🔸 Textures: The models use realistic textures, including wood shingles, corrugated metal, terracotta tiles, and slate to show how different materials look on these shapes.
🔸 Lighting: The image uses consistent directional lighting from the right, creating long shadows to the left, which helps define the three-dimensional volume of each roof.