To improve the living conditions and serve the
needs of the residents of the neighborhood.
To serve as a clearing house of information for
the neighborhood.
To preserve the architectural and cultural
heritage of the neighborhood.
The Creole Cottage is a one and one-half story
house with a gabled roof, the ridge of which is parallel to the street. The
house is raised from 18 to 30 inches above a ventilated crawl space and is
built up to the front property line. There are four squarish rooms with no
hallways. Most Creole Cottages include various additional rooms behind the
main four rooms. The earlier cottages include a gallery and two small
service spaces known as cabinets A dependency (small separate building) at
the rear of the lot probably supported this plan. Later cottages include one
or more rooms constructed at the rear with a ridgeline at right angles to
the main part of the house. This plan effectively moves the dependency from
the rear of the lot and attaches it to the four main rooms.
The front of the cottage usually has four shuttered openings, of which two
are doors and two are windows. Above the front wall is an overhang called an
abat-vent. Much like balconies, abat-vents provide protection to the front
wall, doors, and windows, from the sun and rain.
In cottages with a finished attic, a narrow, steep
stair is provided in one of the rear rooms.
Across the street front of a cottage are four shuttered openings, with two
being doors and two windows. The arrangement of the openings is symmetrical,
but the doors can be toward the center or toward the outside.
Many descriptions of Creole Cottages say they were double houses (two
families) because there are two doors to the street, but that is probably
not correct for the smaller cottages. In the "French Quarter Manual" New
Orleans architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe is quoted as saying:
These one-storied houses are very simple in their plan. The two front rooms
open into the street with French glass doors. Those on one side are the
dining & drawing rooms, the others, chambers. The front rooms, when
inhabited by Americans, are the family rooms, & the back rooms the chambers.
(Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Impressions Respecting New Orleans, Diary &
Sketches, 1818-1820)
By placing the chambers to the side in the Creole fashion, access is
provided from the street through the house to the rear yard and dependency
without disturbing the bedrooms, even though there are no halls in a
cottage.