Sometimes in movies I see an architectural feature of hotels or large houses that have a side motor entrance or drop-off for cars with a roof as shown below:
Is there an architectural term for this thing?
Sometimes in movies I see an architectural feature of hotels or large houses that have a side motor entrance or drop-off for cars with a roof as shown below:
Is there an architectural term for this thing?
There may be other names, the one I am familar with is Porte cochere
Definition of porte cochere Merriam-Webster
1 : a passageway through a building or screen wall designed to let vehicles pass from the street to an interior courtyard
2 : a roofed structure extending from the entrance of a building over an adjacent driveway and sheltering those getting in or out of vehicles
By way of further confirmation, here is the listing for the pictured property, Ivy Road House, Atlanta on the designer's website.
This distinctive painted brick Atlanta Residence was built to maximize its narrow lot by organizing the site with a circular drive that leads to a formal front entry and a porte-cochere that leads to a more informal side entrance.
Derived from the French porte-cochère mentioned in Spagirl's answer, I've mostly commonly heard this termed as the anglicized carport.
Carport is defined by Merriam-Webster as:
an open-sided automobile shelter by the side of a building
side entrance
Whether or not the pictured structure is a carport or a garage, what it provides that's an important feature is a side entrance to the house. This enables groceries, laundry, and the like to be taken into the house from a side door rather than the main entrance to the house.
In a hotel it might be called a drop-off, which allows taxis and other vehicles to drive to a side door underneath a roof and off main street, to avoid traffic jams in front of the hotel entrance.
Since the example in the picture appears to have no gate, but is more of an ornamental entrance for cars to enter one or more garages, I might call it an archway.
An arched or vaulted passage.
My understanding based on searching a few definitions is that a carport is often the final destination of the car, not a mere passageway.
Of interest is this article outlining the distinctions between a garage and a carport:
The International Residential Code (IRC) and Florida Building Code (FBC) have a very specific way of defining the difference between carport and garage:
R309.2 Caports. Caports shall be open on at least two sides... Carports not open at least two sides shall be considered a garage.
It is because the example provided is not designed to be a resting place for the car but rather a passageway that I believe archway appropriately describes the architecture.
Here's an example use of archway from The Great Gatsby:
It was a photograph of half a dozen young men in blazer loafing in an archway through which were visible a host of spires. There was Gatsby, looking a little, not much, youger--with a cricket bat in his hand.