Dormer window of the Building of Préfecture de police de Paris (île de la Cité)Gable dormers atHospices de Beaune in Beaune, FrancePair of hip roof dormer windows on theHoward Memorial Hall,Letchworth
Adormer is a roofed structure, often containing a window, that projects vertically beyond the plane of apitched roof.[1] A dormer window (also calleddormer) is a form ofroof window.
Dormers are commonly used to increase the usable space in aloft and to create window openings in a roof plane.[2] A dormer is often one of the primary elements of aloft conversion. As a prominent element of many buildings, different types of dormer have evolved to complement different styles of architecture. When the structure appears on the spires of churches and cathedrals, it is usually referred to as alucarne.
The worddormer is derived from theMiddle Frenchdormeor, meaning "sleeping room",[3] as dormer windows often provided light and space to attic-level bedrooms.[2]
One of the earliest uses of dormers was in the form of lucarnes, slender dormers which provided ventilation to the spires ofEnglish Gothic churches and cathedrals. An early example are the lucarnes of the spire ofChrist Church Cathedral, Oxford. Dormer windows have been used indomestic architecture in Britain since the 16th century.[4]
Dormer windows were popularised by French architectFrançois Mansart, who used dormers extensively in themansard roofs he designed for 17th-century Paris[citation needed].
Today dormers are a widespread feature of pitched roof buildings.[citation needed]
Also called simply agabled dormer, this is the most common type.[5] It has a simple pitched roof of two sloping planes, supported by an outward face (any combination of glazed and unglazed materials). It thus includes a triangular section below the roofline, i.e. agable. It is also known as adog-house dormer (due to its similar shape).
Also called ahipped dormer,[6] it has a roof composed of three sloping planes that rise from each side of the dormer frame and converge at the ridge—analogous to thehip roof.
Flat roof dormer
The roof of this dormer is a single flat plane approximately horizontal (although usually slightly inclined to allow rain water to run off).
Shed dormer
This dormer also has a single flat plane roof, but in this case, it is sloped in the same direction as the principal roof, only at a shallower angle.[7] A shed dormer can provide head room over a larger area than a gabled dormer, but as its roof pitch is shallower than the main roof, it may require a different roof covering.
Wall dormer
As opposed to the dormer being set part way up the slope of the roof, this is a dormer whose face iscoplanar with (shares the horizontal position of) the face of the wall below. This means that the face of the dormer is essentially a continuation of the wall above the level of the eaves. Later structures (during the period ofrevival styles in 19th-century architecture) feature wall dormers as an important part of eclectic assemblies of elements that make up such styles asNew World Queen Anne Revival architecture and the French-inspiredChâteauesque style.
Eyebrow or eyelid dormer
A low and wide dormer with a curved roof and no sides. Instead, the roof covering is gradually curved up and over the dormer in a flattened bell curve.[8]
Link dormer
This can be a dormer that houses a chimney or a dormer that joins one part of a roof to another.[9]
Bonneted dormer
An arched roof dormer, rounded in shape when viewed from front. Popular in Victorian homes, especially in certain areas, like the Southcott-style row-houses calledJellybean Row inSt. John's, Newfoundland.
Nantucket dormer
A three-in-one dormer structure composed of two gable dormers connected by a shed dormer in between.[10]
InVancouver, there are regulations forlaneway houses stating the minimum setback of the face of the dormer from the wall below, with exceptions. This is to prevent overshadowing neighbouring yards.[14]