Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Linden Terrace. / 43.61861°N 72.98500°W / 43.61861; -72.98500. Linden Terrace is a historic house at 191 Grove Street in Rutland, Vermont. Built in 1912 as a summer estate for a prominent businessman, it is one of the finer surviving summer houses of the period in southern Vermont. It was listed on the National Register of Historic ...
Quarried block of pink Tennessee marble. Tennessee marble is a type of crystalline limestone found only in East Tennessee, in the southeastern United States.Long esteemed by architects and builders for its pinkish-gray color and the ease with which it is polished, the stone has been used in the construction of numerous notable buildings and monuments throughout the United States and Canada ...
View from the front porch. Originally built as a winter residence for David and Mary Gamble, [9] the three-story Gamble House is commonly described as America's Arts and Crafts masterpiece. [citation needed] Its style shows influence from traditional Japanese aesthetics and a certain California spaciousness born of available land and a ...
Daleti marble, Western Welega: white, white with grey veins and other colours [1] Enda Tikurir marble, Western Tigray. Newi marble, Central Tigray. Akmara marble, Central Tigray. Dichinamo marble, Western Tigray.
Here I Grew Up is a mosaic mural on a travertine marble wall that measures 70 ft. in length and 25 ft. in height. [1] It contains over 300,000 hand-cut pieces of Bysantine Smalti (Glass tiles) in 87 different hues. [1] These tiles measure approximately 3/8" x 5/8" x 1/9" thick [1] and were imported from Murano, Italy.
Designated NHL. November 13, 1966 [2] The Jay Cooke House (also known as Cooke Castle), is a historic summer estate house on Gibraltar Island, an island in the Lake Erie community of Put-in-Bay, Ohio. Built in 1865, it was the summer house and a favorite place of financier Jay Cooke (1821–1905). Since 1925, the former Cooke estate has hosted ...
The Oglethorpe was 267 feet (81 m) wide with 140 foot (43 m) long wings on either side. The front porch was 240 feet (73 m) across the front, with the rest being dedicated to the rising towers on either side. The first floor entered through double doors into a grand rotunda with pink, grey, and white marble tiling.
Astor Row (2007) The western end of the Row (2014) Astor Row is a group of 28 row houses on the south side of West 130th Street, between Fifth and Lenox Avenues in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, which were among the first speculative townhouses built in the area.