View allAll Photos Tagged classicalarchitecture

The exquisite Odlin-Otis House, c.1705,

on the National Register of Historic Places

Newport, R.I.

Percy Grose was a figure in the state's Democratic Party in the 1910s. This memorial is classically-inspired, with fluted Doric columns and a prominent wreath.

Parroquia de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe Puerto Vallarta Mexico

 

SAIT Calgary Alberta Canada

Moravian Hatter’s, Winston Salem, North Carolina

Known as the Con Club, the Conservative Club was one of the town's great Victorian buildings. Built in 1890-91 it was designed by Morley and Woodhouse in a classical Renaissance style. The Con Club had a ballroom with sprung dance floor and was well known locally. An elderly lady I met staring at the ruins told me of her memories dancing there.

This building dates from the 3rd century and has a very interesting history. It is still in use today.

The Pagel Mausoleum has Doric colums across the portico.

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.

An indication of the pride and confidence in the Edwardian years.

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.

The childhood home of Anne Boleyn

Rendinghu Park, near Deshengmen Gate Beijing, contains several landscapes. The park originated in the 1950's and underwent considerable renovation in 2007. One of its fascinating features is the partially sunken pseudo-Grecian/Roman style gardens.

Mordecai Moravian Settlement, Raleigh, North Carolina

Michigan Avenue Bridge, Chicago. A fountain on the river sends a jet of water onto the other bank once an hour

Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Canada, and Detroit, USA – seen from the Canadian side

The front part of the building was designed by Sidney R. J. Smith with a classical portico and dome behind. Construction, undertaken by Higgs and Hill, commenced in 1893. The gallery opened on 21 July 1897 as the National Gallery of British Art, but became commonly known as the Tate Gallery, after its founder Sir Henry Tate.

.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

#Temple of #Hephaistos in central Athens, Greece, is the best-preserved ancient #Greektemple in the world, but is far less well-known than its illustrious neighbour, the Parthenon.

It was dedicated to Hephaestus, the god of smiths and metal-workers.

Hephaestus

#Godoffire , #volcanoes , #metalworking , #artisans , #metallurgy , #carpenters , #forges #sculpting , and #blacksmiths

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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.

NRHP #75000647

 

No, it's not about fields. Actually had a tourist ask me that one time. "So why does Chicago have a museum about fields?" The museum's first major benefactor was Marshall Field, hence the name. Maybe they should change it to Macy's?

Capitol Hill, Salt Lake City, Utah

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