porte cochere

porte cochere
(French: "coach door") Passageway through a building, or gateway in an outer wall, designed to let vehicles pass from the street to an interior courtyard.

Such gateways are common features of homes and palaces built in the grand style of Louis XIV and Louis XV. The term also applies to a roofed structure extending from the entrance of a building over an adjacent driveway.

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French  porte cochère (“coach door”) 

      in Western architecture, either of two elements found in large public and private buildings, popular in the Renaissance. A porte cochere, as the French name indicates, was originally an entrance or gateway to a building large enough to permit a coach to be driven through it into the interior courtyard beyond. These gateways are common features of homes and palaces built during the reigns of Kings Louis XIV and XV of France.

 Later, the term was applied to a porch roof built over a driveway at the entrance to a building (usually known as the carriage porch). This roof had to be large enough to accommodate a carriage or other wheeled vehicle, since its purpose was to provide shelter for those getting in or out of the vehicle.
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Porte cochere — Porte cochère Porte cochère équipée de chasse roue métalliques. Une porte cochère (ou passage cocher) est une baie dans la façade d un bâtiment par laquelle les véhicules peuvent passer (une entrée de garage par exemple). Elle est nécessaire pour …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Porte cochère — équipée de chasse roue métalliques. Une porte cochère (ou passage cocher) est une baie dans la façade d un bâtiment, le plus souvent un hôtel particulier[réf. nécessaire], par laquelle les véhicules peuvent passer (une entrée de …   Wikipédia en Français

  • porte-cochere — or porte cochère [pôrt΄kō sher′] n. [Fr porte, a gate (see PORT5) + cochère, coach, fem. adj. < coche: see COACH] 1. a large entrance gateway into a courtyard 2. a kind of porch roof projecting over a driveway at an entrance, as of a house …   English World dictionary

  • porte cochere — gateway for carriages, 1690s, from Fr. porte gate + cochère, fem. adj. from coche “coach” (see COACH (Cf. coach)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • Porte-cochere — Porte co ch[ e]re , n. [F. See {Port} a gate, and {Coach}.] (Arch.) A large doorway allowing vehicles to drive into or through a building. It is common to have the entrance door open upon the passage of the porte coch[ e]re. Also, a porch over a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Porte cochère — ● Porte cochère grande porte permettant le passage des voitures dans la cour d une maison …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Porte-cochere — A porte cochere (French porte cochère , literally coach door , also called a carriage porch) is the architectural term for a porch or portico like structure at a main or secondary entrance to a building, through which it is possible for a horse… …   Wikipedia

  • porte cochere — noun Etymology: French porte cochère, literally, coach door Date: 1698 1. a passageway through a building or screen wall designed to let vehicles pass from the street to an interior courtyard 2. a roofed structure extending from the entrance of a …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • porte-cochere — /pawrt koh shair , keuh , pohrt /, n. 1. a covered carriage entrance leading into a courtyard. 2. a porch at the door of a building for sheltering persons entering and leaving carriages. Also, porte cochère. [1690 1700; < F: gate for coaches] * * …   Universalium

  • porte-cochere — /pɔt kɒˈʃɛə/ (say pawt ko shair) noun 1. a covered vehicle entrance, leading into a courtyard. 2. a porch at the door of a building to provide shelter for people entering and leaving vehicles. Also, porte cochère. {French: gate for coaches} …  

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