Elvis Presley’s Birthplace, a Shotgun/ Wikipedia/CC BY 2.0

Before air conditioning homogenized residential design and made houses indistinguishable from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon to Phoenix, Arizona, people built their homes to suit the climate. In the South, where there was not a lot of money, they also built to suit their wallets. An appropriate response to both conditions was the Shotgun House. Michael Janzen at Tiny House Design explains:

French Enfilade Plan Benefits

Wikipedia, assembled by Michael Janzen/CC BY 2.0

Another significant benefit of the originally French enfilade plan is that every room had high ceilings and windows on both sides, giving excellent cross-ventilation. They pretty much all had front porches off the living room on the front and kitchens at the back that wouldn’t heat up the rest of the house.

Paul Dowsett’s Modern Shotgun

© Sustainable TO

Paul Dowsett’s competition- winning Passive House design for New Orleans was a modern update of the shotgun plan, with a sheltered exterior hallway to adapt the plan for our more modern concepts of privacy; we apparently no longer want other family members traipsing through out bedrooms. But it retains the concept.

KB Homes/Promo image

This is what KB Homes is building in Florida, in a program of green, solar powered homes. It is designed in such a way that it is impossible to live without its air conditioner on; even the corner bedrooms have tiny windows and no cross-ventilation. Even the smallest bit of consideration and concern might have made it a better place, but they don’t even bother; air conditioning is the de facto standard. When the electricity goes out, these home owners will suffocate in any season.

I know we can’t live in shotguns anymore, but we can at least learn from them.