Slide 1 What do we mean when we say "house style" or
... The factory workers and miners lived in inexpensive houses built by the company within walking distance to work. Locally, those communities of houses were known ...
... The factory workers and miners lived in inexpensive houses built by the company within walking distance to work. Locally, those communities of houses were known ...
architectural walking guide
... (Dutch: ‘De Punt’), which was the name given to the peninsula on which Fort Amsterdam was built from 1635, the oldest existing structure on the island. This name became ‘Punta’ in Spanish and changed into ‘Punda’ owing to the West-African etymology of the slaves that were imported during the 17th an ...
... (Dutch: ‘De Punt’), which was the name given to the peninsula on which Fort Amsterdam was built from 1635, the oldest existing structure on the island. This name became ‘Punta’ in Spanish and changed into ‘Punda’ owing to the West-African etymology of the slaves that were imported during the 17th an ...
School of Art - ANU Heritage
... drive leading to the building entrance. The two Eucalyptus Maculosa trees were planted by James Torrence and Ron Crawley and a copper plate was installed at the base of each. Work on the school landscape commenced early. The continuing work on the landscape was supervised and designed by John Hobday ...
... drive leading to the building entrance. The two Eucalyptus Maculosa trees were planted by James Torrence and Ron Crawley and a copper plate was installed at the base of each. Work on the school landscape commenced early. The continuing work on the landscape was supervised and designed by John Hobday ...
Bulwer Road - Durban Art Deco Society
... curiously, the Parisian Art Deco style, which dominated the annual decorative arts salons from the end of WWI until the 1925 International Exposition, was applied only infrequently to buildings. ...
... curiously, the Parisian Art Deco style, which dominated the annual decorative arts salons from the end of WWI until the 1925 International Exposition, was applied only infrequently to buildings. ...
Russian neoclassical revival
Russian neoclassical revival was a trend in Russian culture, mostly pronounced in architecture, that briefly replaced eclecticism and Art Nouveau as the leading architectural style between the Revolution of 1905 and the outbreak of World War I, coexisting with the Silver Age of Russian Poetry. It is characterized by merger of new technologies (steel frame and reinforced concrete) with moderate application of classical order and the legacy of Russian empire style of the first quarter of 19th century.Revival school was most active in Saint Petersburg, less in Moscow and other cities. The style was a common choice for luxury country estates, upper-class apartment and office buildings; at the same time it was practically non-existent in church and government architecture. Neoclassical architects born in the 1870s, who reached their peak activity in 1905-1914 (Ivan Fomin, Vladimir Shchuko, Ivan Zholtovsky), later became leading figures in stalinist architecture of the 1930s and shaped Soviet architectural education system.