False front


In architecture, the false front is a façade designed to disguise the true characteristics of a building, usually to beautify it. The architectural design and purposes of these wall-like features vary:
Tradition of "show facades" goes back to the very beginnings of the architecture, when the simplest buildings might have just one opening serving both as a door and a window. The special role of the wall with this opening was stressed through articulation and decoration.
Outside of architecture, "false front" is used to describe a deceptive outward appearance in general, false hair in front.

Facadism

Show facades

In the Brick Gothic, the Schaufassaden, the facades facing the main street, were richly decorated and frequently concealed the cross-section structure of the building.

Western false front architecture