Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
High-end furniture, a restaurant and wine bar and spectacular patio views make RH Indianapolis' new gallery a unique visit. At RH Indianapolis' mansion showroom, you can buy a $19K rug — or you ...
If you can't buy a multimillion-dollar mansion, maybe you can eat at one. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach ...
RH loaned Rain Room to the Museum of Modern Art in New York for the U.S. premier of EXPO 1: New York from mid-May through July 2013. [21] [22] In 2014, RH opened a 70,000 square foot store which Atlanta Magazine called RH's "next-generation full-line design gallery", which includes amenities like a 50-foot infinite pool. [23]
Morris-Butler House, Indianapolis, no longer open for public tours; National Art Museum of Sport, Indianapolis, dissolved in 2017; reopened as part of the Children's Museum of Indianapolis in 2018 [51] National Military History Center, Auburn, closed 2019 and redeveloped into Kruse Plaza. [52] Ragtops Museum, Michigan City, closed in 2011 [53]
Built for William Hass, today is a house museum Ashe/Crocker Mansion 1883 Queen Anne: Curlett & Cuthbertson: San Francisco: Built for Aimee Crocker (Charles Crocker's niece) and Richard Potter Ashe, it was badly damaged in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and destroyed by fire in 1913 more images: Sarah Winchester House: 1884: Queen Anne ...
The Morris–Butler House is a Second Empire-style house built about 1864 in the Old Northside Historic District of Indianapolis, Indiana. Restored as a museum home by Indiana Landmarks between 1964 and 1969, the American Civil War-era residence was the non-profit organization's first preservation project. Restoration work retained some of its ...
Shopping. Main Menu
Oldfields, also known as Lilly House and Gardens, is a 26-acre (11 ha) historic estate and house museum at Newfields in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. The estate, an example of the American country house movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 2003. [3]