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  2. Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Avenue-West...

    Additionally on the block is the home and garage of city treasurer Frank J. Allen, built as early as 1908, containing original double-hung windows and corner front porch, and the Craftsman 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 story Edmund Duffield-Charles Mitchell House and garage, built during a similar timeframe that features shed roof dormers. The 700 block of ...

  3. Impost (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impost_(architecture)

    1. Arch 2. Impost 3. Column. In architecture, an impost or impost block is a projecting block resting on top of a column or embedded in a wall, serving as the base for the springer or lowest voussoir of an arch. [1] [2]

  4. American Craftsman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Craftsman

    The American Craftsman style was a 20th century American offshoot of the British Arts and Crafts movement, [1] which began as early as the 1860s. [2]A successor of other 19th century movements, such as the Gothic Revival and the Aesthetic Movement, [2] the British Arts and Crafts movement was a reaction against the deteriorating quality of goods during the Industrial Revolution, and the ...

  5. Stick style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stick_style

    The 1874 Chicamacomico Life-Saving Station, Rodanthe, North Carolina.Note the prominent trussing and visual use of vertical columns.. The Stick style was a late-19th-century American architectural style, transitional between the Carpenter Gothic style of the mid-19th century, and the Queen Anne style that it had evolved into by the 1890s. [1]

  6. Stonemasonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonemasonry

    A 15-storey apartment building in La Tourette (Marseille), designed by Fernand Pouillon.Constructed using the massive precut stone method. Gobekli Tepe, early monumental Neolithic stonemasonry using flint-carved limestone columns (~9500 BCE). 12th-century stonemasonry at Angkor Wat Diamond-wire saw in use for quarrying marble.

  7. Socle (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socle_(architecture)

    This was a typical building practice in ancient Greece, resulting in the frequent preservation of the plans of ancient buildings only in their stone-built lower walls, as at the city of Olynthos. [2] A very early example is the two-storey fortified House of the Tiles at Lerna in the Peloponnese , built of mud-brick over a stone socle, with much ...

  8. Column - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Column

    The style was used in bronze by Bernini for his spectacular St. Peter's baldachin, actually a ciborium (which displaced Constantine's columns), and thereafter became very popular with Baroque and Rococo church architects, above all in Latin America, where they were very often used, especially on a small scale, as they are easy to produce in ...

  9. Fluting (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluting_(architecture)

    Greek Doric columns had no base, and this prevented the flutes, which ended in a sharp arris, being worn down by people brushing past. [3] The flutes continue right down to the base of the column, [21] and at the top usually pass through three very narrow bands cut into the stone before reaching the base of the capital, where the shaft swells ...

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