View allAll Photos Tagged classicalarchitecture

Henry Ford Hospital Clinic Tower, Detroit, Michigan

It was said that when Poseidon's trident hit, it landed here and produced a spring of saltwater. Inside, you can supposedly still see the marks from the trident.

Fluted Doric columns are part of the portico of this classically-designed mausoleum.

.A detailed description of this structure is given by F.S. Mackenna in the Kist, vol. 22, 1981. with an Appendix in Vol. 24. According to Mackenna Its design is attributed to William Adam c 1747 and the building dates from 1749.

 

It is built over a large boulder in the hillside from which a natural spring issues. The stream from the rock is collected in an oval rock-cut basin at the foot. A notch in the front rock wall of the basin permits an overflow into a small shallow basin cut into the flagged floor, from which it is conducted by a narrow winding channel in the floor to the outside edge of the pavement. The overflow now falls into a small hole in the channel before it reaches the edge.

 

It is a beautifully built classical structure. The interior has an arched roof and the floor is paved. The blocks, apart from the keystone, surrounding the arched doorway and above it, are decorated with vermiculation. The roof has stone slabs and is curved at the rear. Carved graffiti are present on some roof blocks and on at least one side wall. The finer graffiti have been suggested by Mackenna to have been the work of the stonemasons.

 

Visited by David Dorren and Nina Henry on 20 February 2018.

 

Sony Alpha A6000 with Sigma 30mm f2.8

Gothic revival

Newport, RI

Dhruva Mistry's fountain stands illuminated in front of the Birmingham Council House, in Victoria Square.

 

The fountain features the large figure of a woman, known as the Floozy in a Jacuzzi by the locals, while the classical council house dates to 1879.

The Halászbástya or Fisherman's Bastion is a terrace in neo-Gothic and neo-Romanesque style situated on the Buda bank of the Danube, on the Castle hill in Budapest, around Matthias Church. It was designed and built between 1895 and 1902 on the plans of Frigyes Schulek. Between 1947–48, the son of Frigyes Schulek, János Schulek, conducted the other restoration project after its near destruction during World War II.

 

From the towers and the terrace a panoramic view exists of Danube, Margaret Island, Pest to the east and the Gellért Hill.

 

Its seven towers represent the seven Magyar tribes that settled in the Carpathian Basin in 896.

 

The Bastion takes its name from the guild of fishermen that was responsible for defending this stretch of the city walls in the Middle Ages. It is a viewing terrace, with many stairs and walking paths.

 

A bronze statue of Stephen I of Hungary mounted on a horse, erected in 1906, can be seen between the Bastion and the Matthias Church. The pedestal was made by Alajos Stróbl, based on the plans of Frigyes Schulek, in Neo-Romanesque style, with episodes illustrating the King's life.

 

It was featured as a Pit Stop on the sixth season of The Amazing Race.

 

For more info and photos - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisherman%27s_Bastion

 

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September 2013.

Open House is the annual opportunity to explore hundreds of buildings in London for free and see the architecture. Many of the buildings are not normally open to the public.

The main Foreign Office building in King Charles Street was built by George Gilbert Scott in partnership with Matthew Digby Wyatt. George Gilbert Scott was responsible for the overall classical design of these offices, but Matthew Digby Wyatt, the India Office’s Surveyor, designed and built the interior of the India Office. It was built with rich decoration to impress foreign visitors.

The Queen's House and Canary Wharf, seen from Greenwich Park.

 

"The Queen's House, Greenwich, is a former royal residence built between 1616–1619 in Greenwich, then a few miles downriver from London, and now a district of the city. Its architect was Inigo Jones, for whom it was a crucial early commission, for Anne of Denmark, the queen of King James I of England. It was altered and completed by Jones, in a second campaign about 1635 for Henrietta Maria, queen of King Charles I. The Queen's House is one of the most important buildings in British architectural history, being the first consciously classical building to have been constructed in Britain. It was Jones's first major commission after returning from his 1613–1615 grand tour of Roman, Renaissance and Palladian architecture in Italy."

 

Source: Wikipedia

September 2013.

Open House is the annual opportunity to explore hundreds of buildings in London for free and see the architecture. Many of the buildings are not normally open to the public.

The main Foreign Office building in King Charles Street was built by George Gilbert Scott in partnership with Matthew Digby Wyatt. George Gilbert Scott was responsible for the overall classical design of these offices, but Matthew Digby Wyatt, the India Office’s Surveyor, designed and built the interior of the India Office. It was built with rich decoration to impress foreign visitors.

A view of the Parliament Buildings and the Pest side of Budapest from the Fisherman's Bastion.

 

The Halászbástya or Fisherman's Bastion is a terrace in neo-Gothic and neo-Romanesque style situated on the Buda bank of the Danube, on the Castle hill in Budapest, around Matthias Church. It was designed and built between 1895 and 1902 on the plans of Frigyes Schulek. Between 1947–48, the son of Frigyes Schulek, János Schulek, conducted the other restoration project after its near destruction during World War II.

 

From the towers and the terrace a panoramic view exists of Danube, Margaret Island, Pest to the east and the Gellért Hill.

 

Its seven towers represent the seven Magyar tribes that settled in the Carpathian Basin in 896.

 

The Bastion takes its name from the guild of fishermen that was responsible for defending this stretch of the city walls in the Middle Ages. It is a viewing terrace, with many stairs and walking paths.

 

A bronze statue of Stephen I of Hungary mounted on a horse, erected in 1906, can be seen between the Bastion and the Matthias Church. The pedestal was made by Alajos Stróbl, based on the plans of Frigyes Schulek, in Neo-Romanesque style, with episodes illustrating the King's life.

 

It was featured as a Pit Stop on the sixth season of The Amazing Race.

 

For more info and photos - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisherman%27s_Bastion

Temple d'Auguste et de Livie / Temple of Augustus and Livia

Vienne, Isère, France

 

• erected by the emperors Augustus and/or Claudius

• owes its survival to being converted to a church soon after Emperor Theodosius proscribed the pagan religion.

• During the revolution was briefly used as a "temple of reason"

• various accretions removed during 19th century restorations

• declared a monument historique by the French state, 1840

 

20190416_160947

 

The Couzens Mausoleum sits atop a hill at Woodlawn Cemetery. The Couzens family includes James Couzens, who was mayor of Detroit and a United States Senator from Michigan. James Couzens Highway is named after him.

 

His son, Frank Couzens, also served as mayor of Detroit. James Couzens was also an early investor in the Ford Motor Company. He sued Henry Ford to force him to pay a dividend to stockholders. Ford bought him out for $30 million. The mausoleum, done in granite, was designed by Albert Kahn in the Greek Revival style.

 

Among his other charitable acts, James Couzens donated the money to build Couzens Hall at the University of Michigan.

The Doge's Palace is a gothic palace in Venice. In Italian it is called the Palazzo Ducale di Venezia. The palace was the residence of the Doge of Venice.

 

Its two most visible facades look towards the Venetian Lagoon and St Mark's Square, or rather the Piazzetta. The use of arcading in the lower stories produces an interesting "gravity-defying" effect. There is also effective use of colour contrasts (unfortunately, the patterns are not well shown in the illustrative photographs accompanying this article...from a distance the colours blur).

 

The current palace was largely constructed from 1309 to 1424, designed perhaps by Filippo Calendario. It replaced earlier fortified buildings of which relatively little is known. Giovanni and Bartolomeo Bon created the Porta della Carta in 1442, a monumental late-gothic gate on the Piazzetta side of the palace. This gate leads to a central courtyard.

 

The palace was badly damaged by fire in 1574. In the subsequent rebuilding work it was decided to respect the original gothic style, despite the submission of a neo-classical alternative design by Palladio. However, there are some classical features, for example since the sixteenth century the palace has been linked to the prison by the Bridge of Sighs.

  

As well as being the ducal residence, the palace housed political institutions of the Republic of Venice until the Napoleonic occupation of the city. Venice was ruled by an aristocratic elite, but there was a facility for citizens to submit written complaints at what was known as the Bussola chamber.

 

For more info - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doge's_Palace

Journée de la Marine à St Petersbourg.

Acropolis seen from the fallen columns of Olympian Zeus temple.

This is above the entrance to a church just outside Providence, RI, which is now a school.

The building is from the late 1800s or early 1900s.

September 2013.

Open House is the annual opportunity to explore hundreds of buildings in London for free and see the architecture. Many of the buildings are not normally open to the public.

The main Foreign Office building in King Charles Street was built by George Gilbert Scott in partnership with Matthew Digby Wyatt. George Gilbert Scott was responsible for the overall classical design of these offices, but Matthew Digby Wyatt, the India Office’s Surveyor, designed and built the interior of the India Office. It was built with rich decoration to impress foreign visitors.

The Locarno Suite consists of 3 rooms originally designed by Scott for diplomatic dinners, conferences and receptions.

The chest piece that he wears is called a cuirass. Note the children Romulus and Remus that are sucking the wolf.

Romulus and Remus are legendary twins who, after being abandoned, were suckled by a wolf and in adulthood founded the city of Rome. Thus the wolf and twins evokes the memory of (the founding of) Rome.

Altar of S. Ignazio by Andrea del Pozzo and others, with lapis lazuli and other decorative marbles. The principal church of the Jesuits in Rome, il Gesu was built between 1568 and 1575, to the designs of Vignola and Giacomo della Porta; and Baciccia, Antonio Raggi and Leonardo Retti (nave ceiling). The marble decoration of the nave interior is of a later date.

Trinity College, Dublin (TCD; Irish: Coláiste na Tríonóide, Baile Átha Cliath), corporately designated as the Provost, Fellows and Scholars of the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, was founded in 1592 by Queen Elizabeth I as the "mother of a university"[1], and is the only constituent college of the University of Dublin. Trinity and the University of Dublin form Ireland's oldest and most prestigious university.

 

Trinity is located in the centre of Dublin, Ireland, on College Green opposite the former Irish Houses of Parliament (now a branch of the Bank of Ireland). The campus occupies 190,000m² (47 acres), with many buildings, both old and new, ranged around large courts (known as "squares") and two playing fields.

Corner of Wedikind and Sullivan.

The Challenger Memorial, Arlington Cemetery, Washington D.C.

August Marxhausen published a German-American newspaper, the Detroiter Abend Post.

First Presbyterian, Winston Salem, North Carolina

November 29, 2015. When Frank Gehry was questioned at a Toronto and East York Community Council meeting about a controversial development proposal that called for the demolition of four heritage properties, he said only two buildings in Toronto deserved heritage protection: Old City Hall and Osgoode Hall (National Post Nov 19, 2013).

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