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The revived Georgian style that emerged in Britain during the same period is usually referred to as Neo-Georgian; the work of Edwin Lutyens [40] [41] and Vincent Harris includes some examples. The British town of Welwyn Garden City , established in the 1920s, is an example of pastiche or Neo-Georgian development of the early 20th century in ...
Casa Nova is a neo-Georgian two-storey five bedroom mansion. The building is constructed from hand-cut Oamaru limestone with Baltic pine and kauri timbering. [1] [2] The centre of the home is a recessed entryway flanked by two gables with finials. The building has large angled bay windows. [2] The entrance door has a voussoir above. A balcony ...
It is a neo-Georgian stone house designed by nationally known architect William Lawrence Bottomley and built in 1933, for W. E. Chilton II and his wife Nancy Ruffner Chilton. The 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story central block of the house is flanked symmetrically by single-story wings.
The building is in the Neo-Georgian style, to a design modelled on Stockholm City Hall by the architects Stephenson, Young & Partners. It has a red brick façade with three storeys of Georgian arched windows, a cantilevered gallery towards Llwyn Isaf, and a copper tower. [9] [10] The building cost £150,000 (equivalent to £3.7 million in 2023 ...
124 East 80th Street, the Clarence Dillon House, is also a six-story brick building in the Neo-Georgian style. Its front facade culminates in a pediment, which along with the high end chimneys conceals the two top stories. It, too, has a classically detailed entrance, flanked by Ionic pilasters supporting a segmented pediment.
The house was designed by the firm of Delano & Aldrich in the neo-Georgian style and was completed in 1915. The ground floor of the house is organized around a circular hallway in the 18th-century style topped by a dome, with a patterned black and white marble floor. [1]
Local architect John Leopold Denman designed many new buildings, typically in a "well-mannered and individual" Neo-Georgian style: [71] most were for commercial use, such as 20–22 Marlborough Place, Regent House and the offices for the Brighton & Hove Herald newspaper at 2–3 Pavilion Buildings, [72] but the Hounsom Memorial Church at ...
The building was, like many of Howe's designs, was in the neo-Georgian style, again reusing the ogee gable. The following year the architects designed the Rochambeau and South Providence libraries for the Providence Public Library. These were to be based on the prototype Clarke & Howe had developed in the '20s, but that design proved ...