False Front Red Barn
False Front Red Barn

False Front Red Barn

False Front Red Barn

False front red barn… This unusual red barn is in Diamond, a very small rural unincorporated community about half way between Colfax and Endicott, WA on Endicott Road. I’ve seen lots of barns in many places, but this one is unique. The style of a false front was used commonly in the old west, often on old storefronts, but seeing a false front on a barn, well it took me by surprise. What about you, have you seen one like this before?

 

 

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51 Comments

  1. Desiree

    Pardon my complete ignorance in these matters, Madge, but I’m not sure what I should be seeing/not seeing here. I do not understand what makes this a “false front”. I see a sliding doorway, a loft window and an air vent way up high. I think it’s a lovely old barn and I love the aged appearance of the moss covered roofing. Would the facade not be usual, then? Is it a later add on? Is that what you meant about it being a false front?

  2. No, ma’am, I don’t think I have… I’d remember something like that! The barn is a beauty, but that old west style front really spices it up!

    Thanks for showing this beauty at this week’s Barn Charm =)

  3. I must say I have never ever seen a barn that had a false front before. I wonder at the reasoning behind it. Did someone think that it was aesthetically more pleasing? When I look at the barn, I find whimsy in the progression of size in the windows and the door. I also find it mildly amusing the way it is haphazardly propped up on the side with numerous poles. It is like putting using cork to plug a hole in a Dutch dike. Sooner or later that cork is going to pop and that barn is coming down.

  4. Kay

    I’m with Michaele — the antennae caught my eye. I wonder if someone’s inside with their feet propped up watching “American Idol.” My husband, who’s done carpentry and cabinetry, suggests that it may serve the function structurally of stabilizing the building. As you can see on the other end, it’s getting some propping up. This false front may be adding “shear,” or structural strength, to resist total collapse.

  5. Could it be that it’s a sort of wind breaker?
    I’ve not seen anything like it anywhere, but definitely not in Ohio! I actually like the bending inward side and the texture of the patched roof the best. The total pkg. has great character–an awesome find! :>)

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