Neither is "better" in terms of usefulness or structural efficiency. Hip and gable are primarily responses to design needs.
A hip roof is slightly stronger than a gable.
The end of a roof when it is formed into a shape intermediate between a gable and a hip; the gable rises about halfway to the ridge, resulting in a truncated shape, the roof being inclined backward from this level.
Yes, a gambrel is a form of hip roof.
u lay your shingels level to the hip and cut the excess diagonal off then cover the hip after each side is roofed with a "cap"
All exterior walls in a home are load bearing. The exterior walls on the gable end of your house do not bear much load, but the walls that the hip of the roof bear on carry your roof and ceiling joints. Interior walls are another story. Usually in a smaller one story home there is a wall that runs the midspan of the house that is load bearing for your roof and ceiling joints.
If hipped both ends then, yes.
a hip roof is stronger than a gable roof because it braces itself and cannot move from side to side.
Labor cost for hip roof would be more then gable. Materials are about the same. Hip roof cost slightly more.
A hip roof has a slope on all four sides. A gable roof only has it on two sides. On the short sides of the house the side wall goes up to the point of the roof.
The end of a roof when it is formed into a shape intermediate between a gable and a hip; the gable rises about halfway to the ridge, resulting in a truncated shape, the roof being inclined backward from this level.
A hipped end in roof construction is a roof end plane that is inclined, instead of having a gable end.Some roof designs can have a hip at one end, and a gable at the other end.
The highest point, the peak of each gable or hip.
Gables in House ConstructionA gable on a house is the triangular end of a house with a pitched or angled roof. The number of gables on a house depends on the construction of the roof; the standard "box-shaped" house with a non-hip roof will have 2 gables. A gable can also refer to the wall containing the gable end as defined above.Also note that this type of pitched or angled roof is also known as a "gable roof."Gable is my last name so how is that possoble?
Gables in House ConstructionA gable on a house is the triangular end of a house with a pitched or angled roof. The number of gables on a house depends on the construction of the roof; the standard "box-shaped" house with a non-hip roof will have 2 gables. A gable can also refer to the wall containing the gable end as defined above.Also note that this type of pitched or angled roof is also known as a "gable roof."Gable is my last name so how is that possoble?
The gable end (of a roof) means you don't have to cut hip rafters to frame the roof. It also allows for cross ventilation in the roof space or if it's a living space permits area for windows without the need to build dormers.
With the little info provided all that can be determined is that it is a pitched or sloped roof. If you want to know more, for example, that the roof is a gable or hip construction, your description needs to be more precise.
Yes. A roof with 4 planes could be a hip roof - all four sides of a rectangle building have a slope as opposed to a gable which is sloped only to 2 sides, and therefore has 2 planes. It could also be a gambrel roof which is like a roof on a barn.
To add an addition onto a house of any kind with a hip roof, the addition roof must be shorter than the rest. The hip roof goes all the way down to the eaves.