AAA - Neo-Classical / Revival Architecture (17th-19th)

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Type: Neo-classical (Greek-revival) Architect: KF Schinkel Location: Berlin, Germany

Altes Museum

Type: Early Victorian Architect: Sir Joseph Paxton Location: Housed the Great Exhibition of 1851. Made of iron and glass, like a gigantic greenhouse, it was a symbol of the industrial age. Designed to be movable, last location: Hyde Park in London

Crystal Palace

Type: Prarie School (coined by FLW) Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright Location: River Forest Illinois, USA FLW first major commission as an independent architect; the first prarie house

Winslow House

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: Cass Gilbert Location: New York 52 storeys - 241 meter Steel frame structure; Tallest building in world when completed in 1913

Woolworth Building

Type: Beaux-Arts Architect: Richard Morris Hunt Location: Chicago USA

World's Colombian Exhibition

Type: Gothic Revival (High-Victorian Gothic Style) Architect: William Butterfield Location: London, England "architecturally England's most celebrated Victorian church"

All Saints Margaret Street

Type: Neo-romanesque Architect: H.P. Berlage Location: Amsterdam Beurs van Berlage *Fun fact: became the greatest stock market on the 17th & 18th century because of the TULIP BUBBLE.

Amsterdam Stock Exchange

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Jean Chalgrin Location: Paris, France was built by Napoleon to celebrate his victory at Austerlitz

Arc de Triomphe

Type: Art Noveau and Neo Byzantine (interior) ?? Architect: Dankmar Adler + Louis Sullivan Location: Chicago, Illinois USA 10 storeys Giant auditorium, the firm's offices Wanted to geometricize nature

Auditorium Building

Type: Art Noveau (Vienna Secession) Architect: Otto Wagner Location: Vienna, Austria The building is regarded as an important work of Vienna Secession, branch of Art Nouveau. A conventional office building dematerialized by bending the façade to make it less imposing, making the thinness of its exterior surface evident by highlighting the attachments, and suspending a transparent interior ceiling from masts visible through it. Architecture as impression, experience.

Austrian Postal Savings Bank

Type: Neo-Classical Architect: Benjamin Henry Latrobe Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA

Bank of Pennsylvania

Type: Spanish Gothic + Art Noveau (Catalan Modernisme) Architect: Antoni Gaudi Location: Barcelona, Spain Basilica of the Sacred Family Gaudi embedded religious symbolism in each aspect creating a visual representation of Christian beliefs. He designed three iconic facades for the basilica, the Glory, Nativity, and Passion facades, facing south, east, and west, respectively. Scheduled to be finished on the 100th death anniversary of Gaudi = year 2026.

Basilica de la Sagrada Familia

Type: Gothic Revival (Early Victorian) Architect: Augustus Pugin Location: London, England The largest of the tower's five bells and weighs 13.5 long tons (13.7 tonnes; 15.1 short tons). It was the largest bell in the United Kingdom for 23 years. It is actually labeled as the Elizabeth Tower, to pay honor to Queen Elizabeth II.

Big Ben

Type: Beaux-Arts, French Renaissance Revival (Châteauesque) Architect: Richard Morris Hunt (house); Frederick Law Olmstead (landscape) Location: N.Carolina, USA The largest privately-owned home in the United States; the house of the Vanderbilts *R.M. Hunt = first American trained at Ecole des Beaux Arts

Biltmore Estate

Type: Beaux-Arts + Renaissance Revival Architect: McKim, Mead & White Location: Boston, Massachusetts USA Similar in elevation to St. Gnevieve, Paris

Boston Public Library

The Block of Discord Location: Barcelona, Spain The block is noted for having buildings by four of Barcelona's most important Modernista architects, Lluís Domènech i Montaner, Antoni Gaudí, Josep Puig i Cadafalch and Enric Sagnier, in close proximity.

Buildings of Illa de la Discodia

Type: Catalan Modernisme + Neo-Gothic Architect: Puig i Cadafalch Location: Barcelona, Spain (Buildings of Illa de la Discodia, Barcelona - The Block of Discord)

Casa Amatller

Type: Modernisme-Art Nouveau Architect: Antoni Gaudi Location: Barcelona, Spain (Buildings of Illa de la Discodia, Barcelona - The Block of Discord) The local name for the building is Casa dels ossos (House of Bones), as it has a visceral, skeletal organic quality. Unusual tracery, irregular oval windows and flowing sculpted stone work. The roof is arched and was likened to the back of a dragon or dinosaur.

Casa Batllo

Type: eclectic Neo-Baroque Architect: Marceliano Coquillat Location: Barcelona, Spain (Buildings of Illa de la Discodia, Barcelona - The Block of Discord)

Casa Bonet

Type: Catalan Modernisme Architect: Lluís Domènech i Montaner Location: Barcelona, Spain (Buildings of Illa de la Discodia, Barcelona - The Block of Discord)

Casa Lleó Morera

Type: Catalan Art Nouveau Architect: Antoni Gaudi Location: Barcelona, Spain popularly known as La Pedrera or "The stone quarry", a reference to its unconventional rough-hewn appearance, is a modernist building in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. It was the last private residence designed by architect Antoni Gaudí and was built between 1906 and 1912.

Casa Mila

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Enric Sagnier Location: Barcelona, Spain (Buildings of Illa de la Discodia, Barcelona - The Block of Discord)

Casa Mulleras

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Schinkel + Persius Location: Potsdam, Germany Court Gardener's House It is best known as the summer residence of Crown Prince Frederick William (later King Frederick William IV of Prussia).

Charlottenhof Palace

Type: Neo-Classical (English Palladian) Architect: Richard Boyle and William Kent Location: London, England High influence from Villa Rotund: Palladio's statue is placed at far left, Palladian motif of the decorated balls on the balustrade of the main floor; Palladian low dome; main floor raised over exposed basement level; pediments over windows and doors

Chiswick House

Type: Art Deco Architect: William Van Allen Location: New York (1930) It was the world's tallest building for 11 months before it was surpassed by the Empire State Building in 1931. The structure contains 3,862 exterior windows. Approx. 50 metal ornaments protrude at the building's corners on five floors reminiscent of gargoyles on Gothic cathedrals.

Chrysler Building

Engineer: Isambard Kingdom Brunel Location: England Pylons of Egyptian Character

Clifton Suspension Bridge

Type: Tudor Revival Location: England

Cotsworld Cottage

Architect: Stephen Sauvestre Location: Paris, France Paris France; built for World Fair and not well-received at first - Entrance Pavilion of the 1889 World's Fair Engineer: Eiffel Sculptor: Bartholdi 324 meters - Tallest building which was succeeded by the Chrysler building.

Eiffel Tower

Type: Art Deco Architect: Shreve, Lamb and Harmon Location: New York 85 storeys (1831) An office building in New York City, over one thousand feet high. Opened in the 1930s, it was for many years the tallest skyscraper in the world.

Empire State Building

Type: Chicago School Architect: Sullivan, Holabird & Roche Location: Chicago, Illinois USA 3 Buildings: Facades shows 2 approach of Chicago School (1) Holabird & Roche - straightforward (2) Louis Sullivan - more expressive approach (8 storeys - rightmost)

Gage Group Buildings

Architect: Ferdinand Dutert Location: Paris, France Engineer: Victor Contamin Pavilion built for the Exposition Universelle (1889) in Paris.

Galerie des Machines

Type: Arts and Crafts Architect: Greene & Greene, Location: Pasadena, CA, USA

Gamble House

Type: Neo-Renaissance Architect: FA Duquensney Location: Paris, France

Gare de l'Est

Type: Neo-classical (Beaux-Arts) Architect: Jacques Hittorff Location: Paris, France Expressed on the façade what was happening within Large arches with large thermal windows The clock was predominant Classical arrangements

Gare du Nord

Type: Arts and Crafts Architect: C.R. Mackintosh Location: Glasgow, Scotland

Glasgow Herald Building (The Lighthouse)

Type: Arts and Crafts Architect: C.R. Mackintosh Location: Glasgow, Scotland

Glasgow School of Art

Type: Beaux-Arts Architect: Reed and Stem; Warren and Wetmore Location: New York USA

Grand Central Station

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: Sir Edward Maufe Location: England Pevsner Architectural Guides described the building as 'sweet-tempered, undramatic Curvilinear Gothic', and the interior as 'noble and subtle.

Guilford Cathedral

Architect: Victor Baltard Location: Paris, France Paris's central fresh food market. It was demolished in 1971 and replaced by the Forum des Halles, a modern shopping mall

Halles Centrales

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Edwin Lutyens Location: Yorkshire, UK Mixed elements of classical architecture into his earlier, vernacular and Neo-Georgian designs, and his correspondence with Herbert Baker displayed a growing enthusiasm for classical architecture

Heathcote, Ilkley

Type: Arts and Crafts Architect: C.R. Mackintosh Location: Helensburgh, Scotland

Hill House

Type: Chicago School Architect: William Le Baron Jenney Location: Chicago, Illinois USA 10 floors *demolished* 1885-1931 first building to use a structural steel frame and was the first "skyscraper"

Home Insurance Building

Type: Art Nouveau Architect: Hector Guimard Location: Paris, France It is considered one of the best surviving examples of his mature style.

Hotel Guimard

Type: Art Nouveau Architect: Victor Horta Location: Brussels, Belgium It is generally considered the first true Art Nouveau building, because of its highly innovative plan and its groundbreaking use of materials and decoration.

Hotel Tassel

Type: Neo-classical Architect: John Russel Pope Location: Washington DC a Masonic temple in Washington, D.C., United States that serves as the headquarters of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry It was modeled after the tomb of Mausolus at Halicarnassus.

House of the Temple

Type: Neo-classical (Palladian) Architect: Robert Adam Location: Derbyshire, England - influenced by all greek, gothic, and roman styles - re-worked the façades of an already existing building - a distinct presentation of the temple façade: formal for the public façade - very concerned with balance and order

Kedleston Hall

Type: Neo-classical (Greek-revival) Architect: KF Schinkel Location: Berlin, Germany Schauspielhaus Built to replace the existing theater that was burned down To pay tribute, they revised the temple front/pillars - More simplistic and stark - Not excessive except for its large size

Konzerthaus Berlin

Type: ??? Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright Location: New York *demolished* The five story dark red brick building used pink tinted mortar and utilized steel frame construction

Larkin Soap Building

Type: Greek revival Architect: Henry Bacon Location: Washington DC Memorial building in Washington containing a large marble statue of Abraham Lincoln Greek doric

Lincoln Memorial

Type: Art Deco Architect: Austin, Parkinson and Martin Location: Los Angeles, California USA A pyramidal, mausoleum-inspired roof tops its prominent Art Deco tower, which blends seamlessly with the Romanesque-style columns and Grecian details of the main entrance and forecourt.

Los Angeles City Hall

Type: Art Deco Architect: L. Murray Dixon Location: Miami USA Miami's first boutique hotels, standing as a prime example of Miami Beach's Art Deco architecture. https://www.timeout.com/miami/things-to-do/art-deco-miami-tour

Marlin Hotel

Type: Revival ? Architect: H.H. Richardson Location: Chicago, USA 7 storey - load bearing construction *demolished* Drawing from his own earlier work and both Romanesque and Renaissance precedents, Richardson designed this "massive but integrated" seven-story stone warehouse.

Marshall Field Wholesale Store

Type: Neo-Classical (Federal Style) Architect: Charles Bulfinsh Location: Boston, Massachusetts USA It is considered a masterpiece of Federal architecture and among Bulfinch's finest works, and was designated a National Historic Landmark for its architectural significance. In 1997, at a cost of more than $300,000, the dome was re-gilded, in 23k gold; designed to "epitomize the power and permanency of self-government"

Massachusetts State House

Type: Greek Revival Architect: William Strickland Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA Creative and free adaptation of greek forms, Front has tempietto Based on Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, Athens

Merchant's Exchange

Type: Beaux-Arts Architect: Richard Morris Hunt Location: New York USA The Met An art museum in New York City. One of the leading art museums in the world, it is known for its extensive collections ranging from Egyptian temples to twentieth-century masterpieces.

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Type: Chicago School Architect: Burnham and Root Location: Chicago, Illinois USA 16 storeys Considered the last tall building featuring load bearing masonry (2-4 feet thick at some point) steel and iron (interior) bay windows - borrowed light

Monadnock Building

Type: Palladian Neo-classical Architect: Thomas Jefferson Location: Charlottesville, Virginia Jefferson's home in Virginia Thomas Jefferson's stately self-designed home in Virginia that became a model of American architecture

Monticello

Type: Beaux-Arts Architect: McKim, Mead & White (original); renovated by RENZO PIANO Location: New York USA

Morgan Library & Museum

Type: Venetian Gothic Revival Architect: PB Wight Location: New York, USA One of many Gothic Revival buildings modeled on the Doge's Palace in Venice, seen c. 1863-1865. This building was demolished in 1901.

National Academy of Design

Type: Beaux-Arts Architect: Carrere + Hastings Location: New York USA

New York Public Library

Type: Georgian Architect: Thomas Joy Location: Boston, Massachusetts USA Boston's Oldest Public Building, used as a site for the Massachusetts Assembly

Old State House (Boston)

Type: Neo-Classical (Federal Style) Architect: Charles Bulfinsh Location: Hartfort, Connecticut USA

Old State House (Hartfort)

Type: Neo-classical (Neo-Rococo) ?? Architect: Robert Adam Location: Middlesex, England Building's interior was designed by Robert Adam -the style it was done in was Rococo with Roman wall painting

Osterley Park House

Type: Gothic Revival, Early Victorian Architect: Charles Barry + Augustus Pugin Location: London, UK House of Parliament Meeting site of both Houses of the British Parliament.

Palace of Westminster

Type: Neo-Baroque (Napoleon III Style-Second Empire); Beaux-Arts Architect: Charles Garnier Location: Paris Opera House "probably the most famous opera house in the world" - polychrome facade, opulent staircase Phantom of the Opera *look into more Beaux-Arts

Palais Garnier

Type: Catalan Art Nouveau Architect: Antoni Gaudi Location: Barcelona, Spain A mansion designed by the architect Antoni Gaudí for the industrial tycoon Eusebi Güell; parabolic arch

Palau Guell

Type: Neo-classical, Early Victorian Architect: Lanyon, Burton & Turner Location: UK Plants had been coming into England from around the world; becomes a museum of plants Open with glass and white iron supports; No historic precedents for a greenhouse: an original idea/construction

Palm House, Kew Gardens

Type: Neo-classical (French Renaissance Revival) Architect: Jacques-Germain Soufflot Location: Paris, France It is an early example of neoclassicism, with a façade modeled on the Pantheon in Rome, surmounted by a dome that owes some of its character to Bramante's "Tempietto". Designer Jacques-Germain Soufflot had the intention of combining the lightness and brightness of the Gothic cathedral with classical principles.

Pantheon in Paris

Type: Art Nouveau Architect: Hector Guimard Location: Paris, France Ninety-one Guimard entrances survived until 1970. Eighty-six are still extant and protected as historical monuments

Paris Metro Entrances

Type: Catalan Art Nouveau Architect: Antoni Gaudi Location: Barcelona, Spain The reflection of Gaudí's artistic plenitude, which belongs to his naturalist phase (first decade of the 20th century). During this period, the architect perfected his personal style through inspiration from organic shapes.

Park Guell

Type: Colonial Architecture Location: Topsfield, Massachusetts USA

Parson Capen House

Type: Colonial Architecture Architect: John Jeffs Location: Boston, Massachusetts USA A typical seventeenth-century dwelling which he sold in 1800 to move to a larger house

Paul Revere House

Type: Art Noveau ( Early Vienna Secession) Architect: Joseph Hoffmann Location: Puckersdorf, Austria It was acquired as a "mineral spa together with cure-park.

Purkersdorf Sanitarium

Type: Neo-Classical (English Palladian) Architect: James Gibbs Location: Oxford, England

Radcliffe Camera

Type: Art Deco Architect: Edward Durell Stone, Donald Deskey Location: New York An entertainment venue located in Rockefeller Center in New York City.

Radio City Hall

Type: Arts and Crafts; Neo-Gothic (High-Victorian) Architect: Philip Webb Location: Bexleyheath, UK It was made in the Neo-Gothic style, inspired by architecture of the 13th century. After it had been completed in 1860, the house became one of the first examples of the Arts and Crafts movement before it became international.

Red House for William Morris

Type: Proto-Modernism (Chicago School) Architect: Daniel Burnham and John Root (first & basement) + Charles Atwood (completion) Location: Chicago, Illinois USA 16 storeys An office building (now a hotel) with logically ordered spaces enclosed by faceted walls of glass and a steel skeleton covered by terra-cotta panels, which made for light cladding relative to bricks.

Reliance Building

Type: Beaux-Arts Architect: McKim, Mead & White Location: Providence, Rhode Island USA

Rhode Island State Capitol

Type: Prarie School (coined by FLW) Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright Location: Chicago, USA The term was coined by architectural critics and historians (not by Wright) who noticed how the buildings and their various components owed their design influence to the landscape and plant life of the midwest prairie of the United States

Robie House

Type: Chicago School Architect: Burnham and Root + Frank Lloyd Wright Location: Chicago, Illinois USA a gem is its interior light court. It maximizes the amount of light and air in the building

Rookery Building

Type: Indo-Saracenic (Indo-Gothic Revival) Architect: John Nash Location: Brighton, England *look into Romantic Architecture

Royal Pavilion at Brighton

Type: Neo-Byzantine Architect: Paul Abadie Location: Paris, France Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Paris

Sacré-Cœur Basilica

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: George Gilbert Scott Location: London, England

Saint Pancras Railway Station

Type: Neo-Renaissance Architect: Henri Labrouste Location: Paris, France ** look into his other library that was restored by: Atelier Bruno Gaudin & Virginie Brégal http://www.abitare.it/en/habitat-en/historical-heritage/2017/09/03/labrouste-biblioteca-parigi/

Sainte-Geneviève Library

Type: German-Rococo Architect: Dollman Location: Germany Smallest of the three palaces built by King Ludwig II of Bavaria and the only one which he lived to see completed.

Schloss Linderhof Palace

Type: Art Noveau (Vienna Secession) Architect: Joseph Olbrich Location: Vienna, Austria Wiener Secessionsgebäude An exhibition hall built in 1898 by Joseph Maria Olbrich as an architectural manifesto for the Vienna Secession, located in Vienna, Austria. Secession refers to the seceding of a group of rebel artists from the long-established fine art institution. The building features the Beethoven Frieze by Gustav Klimt.

Secession House (Gallery)

Type: Chicago School Architect: William Le Baron Jenney Location: Chicago, Illinois USA 8 storeys A thick corner that gives visual order to a new building type earliest commercial building constructed with a metal skeleton frame remaining in the US

Second Leiter Store Building

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: E.S. Prior Location: England It is recognised as one of the finest churches of the first half of the twentieth century. "a square-topped spireless tower was an expression of "democratic growth"

St. Andrew's Church, Roker

Type: Neo-classical, Early Victorian Architect: H.L. Elmes Location: Liverpool, UK Most magnificent neo-classical monument in Britain

St. George's Hall

Type: Neo-Classical Architect: James Gibbs Location: London, England

St. Martin-in-the-Fields

Type: Art Noveau ( Early Vienna Secession) Architect: Joseph Hoffmann Location: Brussels, Belgium The house and garden were completed in 1911 and their austere geometry marked a turning point in Art Nouveau, foreshadowing Art Deco and the Modern Movement in architecture. One of the most accomplished and homogenous buildings of the Vienna Secession, and features works by Koloman Moser and Gustav Klimt, embodying the aspiration of creating a 'total work of art' (Gesamtkunstwerk).

Stoclet Palace

Type: Shingle Style Architect: HH Richardson Location: Cambridge Massachusetts, USA

Stoughton House

Type: Neo-Gothic Architect: Horace Walpole, James Essex Location: Twickenham, England

Strawberry Hill House

Type: Ealy Modern Architect: Louis Sullivan Location: Chicago, Illinois, US. also called Schlesinger and Mayer Department Store or Sullivan Center with suggestion of Art Noveau style

Sullivan Center (Formerly Carson, Pirie, Scott)

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Percy Thomas Location: Wales,UK

Swansea Guildhall

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Robert Adam Location: Middlesex, England Rejects the palladian revival, but inspired by Roman antiquity - utilizes notion of movement and picturesque qualities - towers pays hommage to traditional - each room designed specifically (no proportion) - hall-similar to Roman basilica - free standing screens inserted columns in the rooms

Syon House

Type: Organic Architecture??? Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright Location: Spring Green,Wisconsin, USA Architect Frank Lloyd Wright's winter home and school in the desert; The School of Architecture at Taliesin

Taliesin East

Type: Renaissance Revival; Beux-Arts Architect: Richard Morris Hunt Location: Newport, Rhode Island USA A Vanderbilt Mansion A definitive expression of Beaux-Arts architecture in American domestic design by one of the country's most influential architects Richard Morris Hunt. Made Hunt the "dean of American architecture", as he was called by his contemporaries, and helped define the era in American life that Hunt helped to shape

The Breakers

Type: Georgian Architecture Architect: John Wood, the Elder, John Wood, the Younger Location: Bath, England A historic street of large townhouses in the city of Bath, Somerset, England, forming a circle with three entrances. Regarded as a pre-eminent example of Georgian architecture. The name comes from the Latin 'circus', meaning a ring, oval or circle.

The Circus

Type: American Craftsman + Revival Architect: Bernard Maybeck Location: Berkley, California USA Designed by renowned architect Bernard Ralph Maybeck, in a primarily American Craftsman style, with Byzantine Revival, Romanesque Revival, and Gothic Revival style elements. The church is widely considered one of Maybeck's masterpieces; the only National Landmark in Berkley CA

The First Church of Christ, Scientist

Type: Early Victorian + 21st Century Architecture Architect: Lewis Cubitt (old) + John McAslan (interior) Location: London, UK

The King's Cross Station

Type: Neo-Gothic Architect: Heinrich von Ferstel Location: Vienna, Austria

The Votivkirche, Vienna

Type: Palladian Neo-classical (American) Architect: James Hoban (Irish) Location: Washington DC

The White House

Type: Richardson Romanesque Architect: H.H. Richardson Location: Massachusetts, USA

Thomas Crane Public Library

Type: Neo-classical (Greek-revival) Architect: MGB Bindesboll Location: Copenhagen, Denmark

Thorvaldsen Museum

Type: Romenesque Revival (Richardson Romanesque) Architect: H.H. Richardson Location: Boston, USA coined Richardson Romanesque the only church in the United States and the only building in Boston that has been honored as one of the "Ten Most Significant Buildings in the United States" by the American Institute of Architects (AIA)

Trinity Church, Boston

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: Richard Upjohn Location: New York, USA - Built by an Englishman - An episcopal church in a gothic style - Originally the steeple would have been the tallest in the area, very textbook and precise when building it gothically

Trinity Church, New York

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: Pearson Location: England It is one of only three cathedrals in the United Kingdom with three spires.

Truro Cathedral

Type: Colonial Architecture Location: Salem, Massachusetts USA The House of the Seven Gables

Turner-Ingersoll House

Type: Neo-classical (American) Architect: Dr. William Thorton Location: Washington DC As the focal point of American politics it has housed the meeting chambers of the Senate and the House of Representatives for more than two centuries.

United States Capitol

Type: Modern Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright Location: Oak Park, Illinois USA Unity Temple is considered by many architects to be the first modern building in the world.

Unity Temple

Type: Gothic Revival (High-Victorian) Architect: Woodward and Deane Location: Oxford, UK The museum's design was directly influenced by the writings of critic John Ruskin, who involved himself by making various suggestions to Woodward during construction.

University Museum, Oxford

Type: Palladian Neo-classical; Architect: Thomas Jefferson Location: Charlottesville, Virginia "The Rotunda" An architectural manifestation of the Enlightenment and republican ideals he had helped cultivate. Open lawn, Pantheon-like Library

University of Virginia

Type: Neo-classical Architect: Giuseppe Sacconi Location: Rome, Italy From an architectural perspective, it was conceived as a modern forum, an agora on three levels connected by stairways and dominated by a portico characterized by a colonnade.

Victor Emmanuel II Monument

Type: Palladian Neo-classical Architect: Thomas Jefferson Location: Richmond, Virginia USA First neo-classical monument in America; based on Maison Caree, Nimes

Virginia State Capitol

Type: Chicago School Architect: Dankmar Adler & Louis Sullivan Location: St. Louis, Missouri USA 10 storeys terra cotta office building influential prototype of a modern office architecture.

Wainwright Building

Type: Gothic Revival Architect: Goodhue, Cram, Ferguson Location: New York, USA located at the United States Military Academy Architectural high point of the Academy. It can seat 1,200 for Protestant services, 600 for Catholic services, and 100 for Jewish services. Additionally there are meeting spaces available for cadets of all faiths and beliefs.

West Point Cadet Chapel


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