Browse Items (13 total)

  • Tags: renaissance revival

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/4935.jpg
The Cornelius Vanderbilt II House was designed by Richard Morris Hunt in 1895 after its destruction in a fire in 1892. This home was originally a wood-frame house named The Breakers designed by Peabody and Stearns in 1877 and owned by Pierre…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/4882.jpg
On Main St. in Worcester, Massachusetts, is Worcester City Hall with its notable clock tower.

Worcester City Hall, completed in 1898, features aspects of the Italianate Renaissance Revival style, such as projecting porches, window balconies, and…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/4879.jpg
Worcester City Hall photographed from an office building at 120 Front Street.

Worcester City Hall opened in 1898, and features aspects of the Italianate Renaissance Revival style, such as its projecting porches, window balconies, and grand central…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/5036.jpg
Pictured on the left, the Equitable Building (1872, 36 Weybosset St.) features a locally cast iron "Venetian" facade that is the best preserved of the few cast-iron facades in the city. The facade was cast by the Builders Iron Foundry. The design of…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/4844.jpg
The Lauderdale building was designed by Stone, Carpenter & Willson and constructed in 1894. The design received national attention when it published June 30, 1894 in American Architect and Building News, which made mention of it's "fireproof"…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/4808.jpg
The Federal Building (left) was completed in 1857 in the format of an Italianate Renaissance palace. Though not visible, the building is capped by an iron-cast dome that was conceived after construction on the building began. The intent of the dome…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/5323.jpg
The “Independent Man” statue, which was erected on the top of the Rhode Island State House in 1899, was removed in 1975 for repairs and to receive a new coat of gold leaf.  It was returned in the summer of 1976, and was the only time it left it’s…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/1260.jpg
Camp Randall Field was a former Union Army training ground that was donated to the University of Wisconsin in 1893. It was quickly put to use as an athletic field. After numerous problems with the original wooden bleachers, culminating in a collapse…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/1144.jpg
Pictured is a shopping district in downtown Tampa, Florida. To the far right of this picture is the Citizens Bank Building. Built in 1913 with a height of 145 feet tall, this building was considered the tallest building in Tampa until 1915 when the…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/1143.jpg
The four story building to the left of this photo is known as the Kress Building in downtown Tampa, Florida. Originally opened in 1900 on Franklin Street, the store was soon relocated to Florida Avenue in 1908. That store was demolished in 1929. That…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/5498.jpg
The Rhode Island State House seen from the Providence’s east side, likely Congdon St. It was constructed between 1895 and 1904 and has the fourth largest self supporting marble dome in the world. 

5301.jpg
  On 20 July 1976 the “Independent Man” statue, which sits atop the Rhode Island State House, was returned after spending a year being repaired and receiving a new coat of gold leaf.  He also spent some of that time at the Warwick shopping mall. This…

http://www.ricdigitalcommons.com/temp/5454.jpg
  The Breakers is a Vanderbilt mansion located on Ochre Point Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island. It is a National Historic Landmark, a contributing property to the Bellevue Avenue Historic District, and is owned and operated by the Preservation Society…
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2