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Dupuy made several major additions to the hotel in 1878, 1882, and 1889, which transformed it into the 7,000 square foot building seen today. [21] With the final addition, Dupuy had a stucco covering applied to the façade painted to appear like ashlar masonry, to give the hotel a more uniform appearance. [22]
Musée des tisserands : history of chanvre, main culture in the Maine became Mayenne, in an authentic housse of tisserands from the 17th century. Beaulieu-sur-Oudon Musée de la moisson : tout le matériel ancien et l'ambiance des moissons d'autrefois.
Chronique d’une maison l’hôtel de Malbos, son environnement catholique et protestant. Les collectionneurs amateurs 31460 Caraman. 1998; Antoine de Seauve (under the direction of Dominique Buis, Marie-Jo Volle, Nathalie Garel), Eugène de Malbos, in Peindre l'Ardèche, Peindre en Ardèche - de la préhistoire au XXe. Mémoire d'Ardèche et ...
March 1902 advertisement for the first Hotel Empire that stood from 1889 to 1922. In 1889, a seven-story building rose from the ground that would later become The Empire Hotel. Herbert DuPuy purchased this building in 1908. In 1922, DuPuy decided to tear the original structure down and build a 15-story building.
The New Orleans Pharmacy Museum is a museum located in the French Quarter of New Orleans that showcases the world of early pharmacies and medicine and describes development of the pharmaceutical industry and healthcare practices in the 19th century. [1] [2] It is the largest collection of pharmaceutical memorabilia in the United States. [1]
The Musée des Archives Nationales (French pronunciation: [myze dez‿aʁʃiv nasjɔnal]), formerly known as the Musée de l'Histoire de France ([myze də listwaʁ də fʁɑ̃s] ⓘ), is a state museum of French history operated by the Archives Nationales. The museum features exhibitions drawn from the collections of the government archives and ...
Habitat 67, as seen from street level. Habitat 67, or simply Habitat, is a housing complex at Cité du Havre, on the Saint Lawrence River, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, designed by Israeli-Canadian-American architect Moshe Safdie.
It includes the Winslow Santa Fe station as well as La Posada Hotel and Gardens, a Fred Harvey Company hotel designed by Mary Jane Colter in 1929 and restored in 1997 by artist Tina Mion and her husband Allan Affeldt. [2] The hotel also includes a museum for Mion's art, opened in 2011. [3]