Pueblo Revival architecture

Common features of the Pueblo Revival style include projecting wooden roof beams or vigas, which sometimes serve no structural purpose[1], "corbels", curved—often stylized—beam supports and latillas, which are peeled branches or strips of wood laid across the tops of vigas to create a foundation (usually supporting dirt or clay) for a roof.

[2][3] Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter's Hopi House (1904) in Grand Canyon National Park drew heavily on the Pueblo style.

The best known of these was the 1908 remodeling of Hodgin Hall, which survives as well as the slightly earlier Estufa, both designed by architect Edward Buxton Cristy under Tight's supervision.

[3] The other stronghold of Pueblo-style architecture is Santa Fe, where it was popularized in the 1920s and 1930s by a group of artists and architects seeking to establish a unique regional identity.

In 1957, a committee led by John Gaw Meem drafted Santa Fe "H" Historical District Regulations Ordinance No.

Hotel Franciscan in Albuquerque, 1943
Pueblo Revival corbel , hand-carved from ponderosa pine , at the Bandelier National Monument Visitor Center
detail of adobe architecture, La Fonda , Santa Fe, NM
View of the La Fonda hotel from the southwest, built in 1922 and remodeled in 1929