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The Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture is the third architecture school established in Puerto Rico. It is located in downtown Ponce, about half a mile from the main campus of the university at Las Americas Avenue. It was founded in August 2009. [11] Front entrance to the School of Architecture
The Padre Nazario School (Spanish: Escuela Padre Nazario) is a historic public school in Guayanilla, Puerto Rico. Completed in 1926, it epitomizes the monumental schools built in Puerto Rico during the early 20th century. Its Neoclassical and Spanish Revival details at the entry and spatial sequence of the vestibule are exceptional design ...
The José Fontán School (Spanish: Escuela José Fontán) is a historic early 20th-century school located in Morovis Pueblo, the administrative and historic center of the municipality of Morovis, Puerto Rico. The school building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in August 2012 due to its architectural importance as a prime ...
The school building was designed in the Mission Spanish Revival style and built in 1938. Funding for the construction came from the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration, a New Deal agency. [1] The school was designed by Puerto Rican State Architect Rafael Carmoega.
Jacinto Lopez Martinez Grammar School, also known as Escuela Jacinto Lopez Martinez, in Dorado, Puerto Rico, is a school built in 1923-25 which was designed by architect Pedro Adolfo de Castro. It is a two-story U-shaped building.
Jones School (Spanish: Escuela Walter McK. Jones ) is a historic school building located in Villalba Pueblo , the administrative and historic center of the municipality of Villalba, Puerto Rico . The school was designed by famed Puerto Rican architect Rafael Carmoega and built in 1926, with additional modifications finished in 1947.
The María Dávila Semidey School, at 300 Muñoz Rivera St., Patillas, Puerto Rico. The school was designed by Architect Francisco Gardón Vega. The school building was designed in the Mission Spanish Revival style and built in 1925. It was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places on November 14, 2012. [1]
Erected four blocks away from the town's plaza in a rectangular lot measuring 18,425 square meters, the school originally included 8 classrooms. Many original features remain in place, making the Luis Muñoz Rivera School in Lajas one of Puerto Rico's best examples of government-sponsored institutional architecture during the early 20th century ...