Not Your Average Ranch
Add sizzle to your ranch house by working with what you've got
In a world of 5,000-square-foot suburban homes, charming bungalows and soaring loft space, my little ranch sometimes seems to pale in comparison.
I have often stared at the front of my home, wondering how to make it look more like the beautiful Colonial down the street or how to give it a rustic, log cabin feel. Sometimes I even dream about a second story addition and twin chimneys. Then I give up and realize that I will never win trying to make my ranch style home into something that it is not. Instead, I need to focus on the characteristics that make a ranch unique and capitalize on them.
Adding unique entryways, paths and other landscape features can emphasize the natural lines and materials of the ranch home. Today we are going to take a look at some ranch style homes that are not your average ranch. They have added features that make the ranch sexy again.
I have often stared at the front of my home, wondering how to make it look more like the beautiful Colonial down the street or how to give it a rustic, log cabin feel. Sometimes I even dream about a second story addition and twin chimneys. Then I give up and realize that I will never win trying to make my ranch style home into something that it is not. Instead, I need to focus on the characteristics that make a ranch unique and capitalize on them.
Adding unique entryways, paths and other landscape features can emphasize the natural lines and materials of the ranch home. Today we are going to take a look at some ranch style homes that are not your average ranch. They have added features that make the ranch sexy again.
| Create drama. The most critical aspect missing from the average ranch is a little bit of drama. In my dreams, I give my ranch drama with turrets, chimneys and grand additions. In my reality, I am inspired by designs that inject drama into an average ranch. The wood plank wall, the modern portico and the plantings give this home pizzazz, and I am simply smitten. Private Comment
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Accentuate the base. Try accentuating the color of your front door by using a similar color in a contrasting material around the base of your home. This tiny detail will give your ranch a visual foundation and emphasize the long, lean lines of this architectural style. You might compare this foundation line to the collar of your shirt. As your collar line creates a frame for your face, the foundation line creates a frame for your home.
Private Comment
| Replace the front door. Replacing a worn or outdated front door is a great investment — and in a ranch style home the impact is even greater. Private Comment
The front door is the lipstick of a house facade, and can make or break the look (ever seen the wrong shade of pink on a redhead?). A splash of color, an expanse of polished walnut or even an artistically designed screen door can give your home a graceful and alluring smile or a quirkily charming grin. |
| Emphasize the horizontal. Ranch style homes are long, low and horizontal in orientation. Adding a pathway bordered by brick columns and iron fencing repeats the same long, low line, but orients it towards the visitor. This balances the entire look of the home and draws your eye to the gorgeous front door. Private Comment
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| Try a portico. A portico is simply a small roof over the entry, braced by two columns. It is a defining feature that gives shape to the facade and also serves the practical purpose of a shelter from weather at the front door. Private Comment
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| A portico need not be classical. You can use modern lines and materials to create a fresh look. While a portico is an investment, it will make a strong impact on your home's facade. Private Comment
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| Add plants. If you don't have mature trees, you can still use annual and perennial plantings to boost your home's curb appeal. Black-eyed Susans are a cheerful welcome and a great contrast to the butter yellow and cornflower blue of this home. Private Comment
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| Add architectural elements to the landscape. Accentuate plantings with large raised beds and a matching mailbox post. Notice how the three brick structures create a triangle and balance the pathway; all three elements working together to draw your eye to the front door. Private Comment
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| How have you updated your ranch home? Did you add plantings for a little height? Did you add a pathway, porch or portico? How did you inject drama into the facade of your ranch? Let me know in the Comments section. Private Comment
More: Houzz Tour: Open and Cozy Family Space My Houzz: Ranch Home in the Northwest Suburbs Houzz Tour: A Sweet Southern Makeover Houzz Tour: A Mid-Century Modern Getaway |
Comments

Michelle Toivonen says:
Thanks for this piece of reality! Many of us must beautify homes with less auspicious beginnings. This is full of great ideas to add elements that would make any ranch more interesting.
3 months ago ·
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designchallenged says:
Thanks for this ideabook and the ideas for enhancing the curb appeal of these ranch-style homes.
3 months ago ·
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Mary Roberts_Williams says:
LOVE the little ranchers!!! Thanks for this article...are you in Austin?
3 months ago ·
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newsprout says:
I too have a little ranch and know exactly what you mean. You have to make the best of what you have. I wish more small homes, cottage houses and ranch houses were featured which probably reflect a larger portion of your readers. I love to see and read about these elegant very large custom homes, victorians and coastal beauties, but the reality is most of us live in more modest homes and are trying to make the most of something more common.
Sarah Enloe says:
I have a ranch, too. We've taken off the old iron porch rails and added chunky columns, removed the "green meatball" plantings (my mother-in-laws term) and replaced them with grasses and have more landscaping plans in the works (as soon as we take care of one of the other traits of the ranch: too few bathrooms and closets). Thanks for the ideabook.
3 months ago ·
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Kimberly Niesz says:
Nice article! My husband and I love ranch style homes and just recently purchased our second. Last year we gave our previous home (a small 800 sq.ft. ranch) a face lift by adding a front porch and new landscaping.
It made a big impact on it's curb appeal.
It made a big impact on it's curb appeal.



jenifleur says:
Great ideas. I have a bit of a builder generic two story home and I Love the peaked portico. We have a flat one. Sometimes I wish I could knock down my 1990 house and build a little ranch with tall ceilings and less space to clean :)
3 months ago ·
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Bette says:
My motto when making decisions for my home was low, horizontal and simple. I call my home "The Unremarkable Home". I did rebuild the portico of my home with a less George Jetson feel to the traditional vertical pillars. I recessed the entry lamp, and designed my Ticonderoga Yellow door with the vertical light.

3 months ago ·
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kjr0809 says:
Thanks so much for this. We just purchased a ranch style and it definitely needs something to break up the kleenex box feel of it. Was going to send in a picture and ask on houzz, but this covers it.
3 months ago ·
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nasafemme says:
We have a 2-story barn-style home that looks like a raised ranch due to the sloping eaves on the top floor. To add pizazz to the entry, we built a small portico with stone-wrapped bases on the columns. The stone matches the garage level which has three bays surrounded by the same stone. I would love to see a feature on raised ranches or drive-under homes.
3 months ago ·
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Amy Renea says:
So great to see ranch fans coming out of the woodwork and commenting ;)
Mary - I'm not in Austin...I'm in Hershey!
Kimberly - WOW! Your place looks amazing!
Mary - I'm not in Austin...I'm in Hershey!
Kimberly - WOW! Your place looks amazing!
3 months ago ·
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Amy Renea says:
nasafemme and Bette -- your improvements sound (and look!) right on!
Y'all have me thinking about more ranch articles!! Bring on the everyday!
Y'all have me thinking about more ranch articles!! Bring on the everyday!
3 months ago ·
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Ieteke says:
I enjoyed this idea book immensely ! I agree with newsprout... I enjoy the over the top, one of a kind homes on Houzz but that isn't reality for many of us. I love to see photos of modest homes, with smaller footprints, lovingly cared for by their owners. This is our small 1940"s one floor retirement home.
3 months ago ·
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appleflag says:
Thank you! We are learning to love our dated 1978 ranch & celebrating it with a big remodeling this year. Can't beat the cozy, well-located neighborhood & walking to school. Love your design ideas.
3 months ago ·
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thebeatonpath says:
I needed this! We live in a 1966 ranch that has never been updated. I, too, stare at the front and wonder how on earth I can make it a bit more updated. I'm thinking Craftsman!
3 months ago ·
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lindadunn2545 says:
I too agree with newsprout. We're currently updating our house and I loved looking through the photos and idea books on Houzz, but when it came to actually implementing them I realized most were out of our price range and did't fit our small home. Hopefully this will spur more idea books on ideas for the average home owner.
3 months ago ·
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stormpeak says:
Our ranch home's curb appeal suffered from too much wood: Cedar shake roof, cedar plank exterior, cedar deck ... To ground the home and vary the materials, we added boulder retaining walls, placed large boulder "outcroppings" among planting beds, installed brick paver walkways and porches, and planted colorful trees and shrubs. Flower pots and flower beds add pizzazz in summertime. Landscape lighting adds drama at night.
3 months ago ·
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Whitney Figen says:
We bought a mid-century ranch home that the previous owners attempted to turn into a traditional home, complete with crown moldings, leaded glass window details, valances over the windows, etc. We are slowly removing the "fluff" to bring out the beautiful simplicity of the interior spaces, and emphasize the clean angles and lines inherent to its architectural style. We love ranch style, and the casual, friendly, active lifestyle it evokes!
3 months ago ·
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Koti Interior Design LLC says:
Great ideas and I love the embracing of the ranch! I see a shift towards the reality of most home owners to appreciate and love their more manageable sized homes rather than the palatial houses we have been taught to lust after. Do we really need all that square footage in the end? I love old homes of all styles, but a mid century ranch makes my heart swoon. Thank you for your article!
3 months ago ·
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Amy Renea says:
It's so exciting to see so many positive responses to loving the classic ranch!!
3 months ago ·
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Patsy Carter says:
This is reality - and, most of us live in reality, but there is very little published which offers ideas to the general mass.
3 months ago ·
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noname12 says:
They are nice, but come on these are not your typical 1960 ranch homes. I wish some of these so called home improvement sites would get a REAL house to make over at a REAL cost not something that hits the $25,000 mark and up. I have a POOR TYPICAL RANCH house. The ones here were over my price bracket even when they were 1st built let alone now.



3 months ago ·
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stargazer51 says:
I need to remodel a 1978 ranch that is our retirement home. The original owners combined Mediterranean (orange tile roof) and Tudor (steep roof pitch but framed with trusses so we can't expand up) plus Tudor-like trim in the gables. It has a wonderful view and is private which is why we bought it. My style is spartan traditional but I want to include natural materials. Any suggestions? We are replacing the roof with comp shingles.
3 months ago ·
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snicklefritz says:
Really like the simplicity; the biggest problem is none is deer-proof. If we in central Wyo. don't use colored rock, it'll all be gone in the morning.
3 months ago ·
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Amy Renea says:
Snicklefritz -- good point! We in Pennsylvania have the same issue. Fencing has helped as well as mixing the deer resistant plants (daffodils, onions, spurge) in with the crocus and tulips and roses and such. Now if I could just get my chickens to stop scratching up seedlings!
3 months ago ·
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Amy Renea says:
jacqued - I hear what you are saying!! There is much inspiration to be found in larger, luxurious homes, but sometimes it doesn't translate to a more modest house. I love homes like yours and would suggest a cottage or cabin look might look nice on your home. On the front facade, the garage door takes too much visual weight on, while the columns are too light. Since the garage door is a large part of the facade of your home, consider investing in a wooden door, or painting the door a darker color that blends in more with the brick. Boxing the columns and making a railing to porch in the front walk would add balance to the right side of the house. Your chimney is a striking feature and plantings and/or color could make a bigger impact with it. If it is in the budget, the driveway could be replaced, but if it is not, inexpensive plants in brilliant colors (like creeping thyme) could be placed in the cracks to make it look more intentional.
Moving to the back of the house...The base of the sunporch needs some plants or windowboxes to break up the strong white line. If you can put in a patio or porch, it will extend your living space significantly. You have a nice space for a garden that could transform the look of the house!
...and finally...there are a bunch of people that would kill for a brick fireplace!! I would paint that puppy in grey or white and you have a HOST of modern options for decor paths or you could leave it natural brick and go rustic/modern with natural blond woods (lighter to contrast the dark brick) and industrial metals.
YOU HAVE OPTIONS! It doesn't matter how small or dated your home might seem, it can always be helped with good design choices! Hope this helped a bit!
Moving to the back of the house...The base of the sunporch needs some plants or windowboxes to break up the strong white line. If you can put in a patio or porch, it will extend your living space significantly. You have a nice space for a garden that could transform the look of the house!
...and finally...there are a bunch of people that would kill for a brick fireplace!! I would paint that puppy in grey or white and you have a HOST of modern options for decor paths or you could leave it natural brick and go rustic/modern with natural blond woods (lighter to contrast the dark brick) and industrial metals.
YOU HAVE OPTIONS! It doesn't matter how small or dated your home might seem, it can always be helped with good design choices! Hope this helped a bit!
3 months ago ·
Like
Amy Renea says:
Re: I need to remodel a 1978 ranch that is our retirement home. The original owners combined Mediterranean (orange tile roof) and Tudor (steep roof pitch but framed with trusses so we can't expand up) plus Tudor-like trim in the gables. It has a wonderful view and is private which is why we bought it. My style is spartan traditional but I want to include natural materials. Any suggestions? We are replacing the roof with comp shingles.
Stargazer -- I'd love to see photos! Color can blend styles that seem disparate, so that would be a good place to start, but I can't really give specific advice without a photo. You are blessed to have found a private space with a view!!! Play that up!!
Stargazer -- I'd love to see photos! Color can blend styles that seem disparate, so that would be a good place to start, but I can't really give specific advice without a photo. You are blessed to have found a private space with a view!!! Play that up!!
3 months ago ·
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