Most houses in North America are wood-framed structures.
Adding connections from the base of the wood-framed structure to the foundation is almost always an important part of a seismic retrofit.
The wood-framed structure was designed in the Gothic Revival style.
The largest of these, the main lodge, is a three-story wood-framed structure on a fieldstone foundation, built in 1911.
It was a modest wood-framed structure that housed railroad workers, lumbermen, and travelers.
The wood-framed structure sits upon a low foundation made of sandstone ashlar.
Itascatown was a line of a half-dozen small wood-framed structures and tents near the beach on the island's western side.
The bottom storey of the base is of brick, with the upper two storeys being a wood-framed structure.
The wood-framed structure was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1981.
The building was a massive wood-framed structure with open timbering, in imitation of an old English style.