In the village center several farmhouses that have been converted into homes have been preserved from the so-called 'Gooise hallhouse type'. These elongated three-aisled hallhouse farms have a faintly sloping roof and a transverse section with side track and raised hood.
Possibly still from 1630 the farm Zijtak 4, where in the part a stonemason is located. The small farm Kerklaan 7 is equipped with possibly 17th century dental frames; the roof of the side aisle has been lifted later. Dating from the 18th century, Kerklaan 10-12 (stable converted in 1910), St.-Janstraat 47a (corrugated roof), Torenlaan 7 (spout with curved fronton), De Uiltjes (Zevenenderdrift 53) and Lindebleusum (St.-Janstraat 37). At Torenlaan 9 the braids in red brick stand out against the yellow stones of the rest of the façade. The stool house farm Brink 35 is also set up in the 18th century, and the porch was renovated around 1900. An example of a cross-house farm is Zevenend 6 (facing brick '1838'). The farm Oud Ezelenhof (Oosterend 17-21) has a mantelpiece in the porch with parrots (18th century). The eighteenth-century farms Ambachtstraat 11 and Smidslaantje 6-12 have been restored with great intent. Several farms have porcelain covered shingles or rear facades, such as Bij den Toren 1-3, Torenlaan 33 (18th century) and Molenweg 35 (19th century).
The farm Lindenhoeve (Van Nispenstraat 27-29), now home of the Historical Circle Laren, dates from around 1810, but has a façade from about 1860; the gable sign in the form of a 'sugar bowl' has been reconstructed. Such a gable sign is also visible at the small farm Boekweitskorrel 16 (circa 1860). A beautiful 'camel back' and a roof lifted for the benefit of the side-car with a pass door is St.-Janstraat 27 (19th century). The plastered greenhouse-shaped extension of the Eemnesserweg 35 farm dates from 1837. Noteworthy are the small plastered farm Smeekweg 78 (circa 1850) and the Torenlaan 30 farm (year anchors '1867'). Carved wind springs feature the farms De Schout (Oosterend 4; year anchors '1872') and Werk en Rust (Kerklaan 1, circa 1880). Neo-Renaissance elements in the form of plastered bands and stretches show Buckwheat grain 9-9A (circa 1895) and Nieuwlarenweg 20 (1905, J. Banis). Somewhat younger is the Zevenend 38 farm (1917, H.F. Smit).