Prairie Home Style

The Prairie Home


The Prairie home style is one of the first architectural styles to originate in the United States. Popularized by Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie School Designs, Prairie homes embrace the belief that a building should appear to grow organically from its site. It uses long horizontal bands of windows and trim to evoke the prairie landscape.

essential elements

Essential Style Elements

Prairie style homes are typically single-story and include rows of doors and small windows banded together by continuous head trims. The style features low-pitched, hipped roofs with overhanging eaves and an open floor plan with central chimney.
style options

Colors & Finishes

The most commonly used colors are earthy browns and rusts, autumnal reds and golds, the warm tans and beiges of natural stone, and leafy greens. 

Prairie Exterior Colors

Exterior Color Palette

  • sandtone color swatch option for andersen windows
    Sandtone
  • terratone color swatch option for andersen windows
    Terratone
  • forest green color swatch option for andersen windows
    Forest Green
  • cocoa-bean color swatch option for andersen windows
    Cocoa Bean
  • red rock color swatch option for andersen windows
    Red Rock

Interior Wood Species

  • maple wood option for andersen windows and doors
    Maple
  • oak wood option for andersen windows and doors
    Oak
  • alder wood option for andersen windows and doors
    Alder

Interior Stain Colors

  • honey swatch of interior stain options for andersen doors
    Honey
  • mocha swatch of interior stain options for andersen doors
    Mocha
  • clear coat swatch of interior stain options for andersen doors
    Clear Coat

Hardware Styles

Prairie style window hardware embraces simple lines and functional form. Hinges, sash locks and lifts are integral to the style, and any decorative elements are simple and understated. Door hardware features minimally sized, meticulously matched components in antique brass or oil rubbed bronze finishes.
Prairie Casement Hardware

Casement Hardware

Contemporary Folding handle in Black finish

A-Series Double-Hung Lock and Keeper

Double-Hung Hardware

Lock and Keeper in Oil Rubbed Bronze finish

Newbury

Newbury® Door Hardware

With its simple lines and minimal decoration, Newbury® hardware is a beautiful match for Prairie style homes.
Anvers

Anvers® Door Hardware

For a slightly more refined appearance, Anvers® hardware offers a clean look that complements the Prairie style aesthetic.

Hardware Finishes

  • Andersen Windows Hardware Finishes Antique Brass
    Antique Brass
  • Black swatch
    Black
  • Andersen Windows Hardware Finishes Oil Rubbed Bronze
    Oil Rubbed Bronze

Grille Patterns

The quintessential window and grille pattern in the Prairie style is a casement window with the Prairie grille pattern. It is, however, acceptable to have some windows with grilles and some without.

With this grille style, the visible glass dimensions in the corners should be 4" x 4". If the window is small and the use of grilles makes the center pane of glass 4" or less in width or 4" or less in height, grilles should not be used.

For a double-hung window, the Prairie grille pattern should be used only in the window's upper sash.

Casement Prairie Grille Pattern

Casement Window

Prairie grille pattern shown on a casement window
Double-Hung Prairie Grille Pattern Top Sash Only

Double-Hung

Prairie grille pattern shown on a double-hung window (top sash only)
Prairie Grille Pattern

Patio Doors

Prairie grille pattern shown on a patio door
Pattern Book

More On This Home Style

Pattern books from the Andersen Style Library present quintessential details of the most popular American architectural styles, with an emphasis on window and door design. The result of years of research, they exist to make it easier to create homes with architectural authenticity.
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