The Colonials Club House started a new style in the future design of fraternity and sorority chapter houses at Iowa State. Earlier chapter houses in Ames were
vernacular framed structures that were designed to look like single-family dwellings. Designed by the
Des Moines architectural firm of
Proudfoot & Bird, this two-and-a-half-story brick structure featured the
Colonial Revival style, which became one of the prominent styles for fraternity and sorority houses associated with the university. It was also the first masonry chapter house at Iowa State. The house's entrance features a large scale two-story entry porch with four
columns and two
pilasters that have stylized
Ionic capitals, supporting a
cornice and
frieze. The frieze includes the Greek letters
ΘΔΧ. The first floor includes the living room, a back hall (library), a dining room, and a front hall. The front hall has oak paneling, built-in seating, oak flooring, and an oak staircase. Oak pocket doors lead to the living room which as an oak fireplace mantel and an oak coffered ceiling. The building was renovated and expanded in 1920 to reconfigure the main level, expand the size of the living room, and add a sleeping porch. This expansion cost $5,000. A second addition in 1926 included a one-story accommodation for the fraternity's house mother. A third addition in 1966 was designed by the Des Moines architectural firm of Woodburn & O'Neil. ==See also==