Category
page 1Farmhouses
farmhouse
thumb|A farmhouse (at bottom) in Einsiedeln, Switzerland
thumb|The Devil's Farmhouse in [[Mellieħa, Malta, built by the Order of St. John with limestone]]

baserri
thumb|300px|The baserri at the Eduardo Chillida|Chillida Museum in Hernani
A baserri (; Spanish: caserío vasco; French: maison basque) is a traditional half-timbered or stone-built type of housebarn farmhouse found in the Basque Country in northern Spain and Southwestern France. The baserris, with their gently sloping roofs and entrance portals, are highly characteristic of the region and form a vital part in traditional Basque societal structures. They are also seen to have played an important role in protecting the Basque language in periods of persecution by providing the language with a ve
Upper Lusatian house
special type of house that combines log house, timber-framing and building stone methods of construction
Low German house
type of timber-framed farmhouse found in Northern Germany and the Netherlands, which combines living quarters, byre and barn under one roof
homestead
single or small group of buildings

gulf house
farm
Haubarg
thumb|The former Hof Jacobs in Seeth, Nordfriesland district
A Haubarg, rarely also Hauberg, is the typical farmhouse of the Eiderstedt peninsula on the northwest coast of Germany and is a type of Gulf house. It emerged in the late 16th century when West Frisian immigrants brought with them the Gulf type of farm building and it continued to be used until the late 19th century. In the Netherlands these houses are called stolpboerderij.
montafonerhaus
thumb|A typical Montafonerhaus in Gemeinde Gaschurn-Partenen|Gaschurn ([[Vorarlberg)]]
The Montafonerhaus (or Montafon house) is a house type in the Montafon valley in Vorarlberg (Austria).
Black Forest house
type of house found in southwestern Germany
aisled house
thumb|A postcard photograph inside a maison landaise
thumb|Kliese Housebarn in Emmet, Wisconsin, U.S.A. Built ca. 1850 for Friedrich Kliese, an immigrant from Silesia
A housebarn (also house-barn or house barn) is a building that is a combination of a house and a barn under the same roof. Most types of housebarn also have room for livestock quarters. If the living quarters are only combined with a byre, whereas the cereals are stored outside the main building, the house is called a byre-dwelling.
boô
thumb|250px|right|Hekman's boô in Schoonebeek
A boô (also spelled boo or boe) is an old Saxon building where a farmer could spend the night with his cattle if he let them graze far outside the village. The buildings, which had separate areas for cattle and farmer to live, were made with cheap materials. Walls were made of straw or braided twigs covered in cow manure or loam; the roofs were also made of straw.
type of farmhouse
formal style of a farm
Uthland-Frisian house
variation of the Geestharden house, a type of farmhouse that, for centuries, dominated the North Frisian Uthlande, that is the North Frisian Islands, the Halligen and the marshlands of northwest Germany