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Holland House shown as "Earl of Hollands" on a 1675 map by John Ogilby. Cope commissioned the house in 1604 from the architect John Thorpe, [a] to preside over a 500 acres (200 ha; 0.78 sq mi) estate that, in modern terms, stretched from Holland Park Avenue almost to Fulham Road, [3] and contained exotic trees imported by John Tradescant the Younger. [4]
The Holland House opened in 1892. It was a large building of Indiana limestone, 100 by 150 feet (30 m × 46 m). Special interest was attached to it as it was a careful reproduction of Holland House of London. It contained the coat-of-arms of Henry Rich, the first Earl of Holland, with the decorations and historic features of the Kensington ...
10 Rockefeller Plaza (formerly the Eastern Air Lines Building and Holland House) is a 16-story building located on Rockefeller Plaza between 48th and 49th Streets in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. Completed in 1940, the building is part of Rockefeller Center and, like the rest of the complex, was built in the Art Deco style.
Holland House (Atlanta), Atlanta, Georgia – built in 1842 it was the oldest house in Atlanta still standing in the early 1900s Teasley–Holland House , Hartwell, Georgia, listed on the NRHP in Hart County
Holland House (demolished). Built in 1842 or 1848, this was the oldest house in Atlanta still standing in the early 1900s. In the early 1900s, the oldest house in the city was the Holland House, built in 1842 [3] or 1848. [4] It originally had stood at the northeast corner of Whitehall (now Peachtree St. SE) and Alabama streets.
Holland House is a Georgian country house, in Kingsgate, Kent in England. It was built between 1762 and 1768 by the politician Henry Fox, 1st Baron Holland (1705–1774), of Holland House in Kensington , as his retirement home.
The family's London home, Holland House, was built in 1605 and burnt down during the Blitz. The building remained a burned-out ruin until 1952, when he sold the house and fifty-two acres to London County Council for £250,000. The land and its gardens became Holland Park, a substantial public green space in Kensington. [3]
Holland House was a house in Atlanta, which, in the early 1900s, was the oldest house standing in the city. Different sources state that it was built in 1842 [ 1 ] or 1848. [ 2 ] It originally had stood at the northeast corner of Whitehall (now Peachtree St. SE) and Alabama streets, [ 1 ] at the rear of the Republic Block .