For a few decades in the 19th century, Italianate was one of the fastest developing and most popular architectural styles in the United States. Pam Spaulding As the name suggests, the Italianate ...
Brooklyn’s urban architecture evolved over the 19th century to fit into city planners’ ideas of how to best utilize space and land. They got their ideas from the layouts of many European cities, which ...
The Italianate style may be more American than Italian when it comes to measuring its popularity between 1850 and 1890. Considered a “picturesque style” for its reference to the Old World and Italian ...
Beginning around 1850, Cincinnati’s wealthiest beer brewers and pork packers populated the area that we now know as Dayton Street Historic District. At the time, it was colloquially referred to as ...
Read Part 2 of this story. For many people, the quintessential Brooklyn row house is the Italianate brownstone. The name conjures up the streetscape of rows of identical houses stretching down a block ...
Today on Architectural Digest we visit Baronne Street in New Orleans to tour a civil war era property bursting with potential but in need of renovation. This house is a quintessential example of ...
The village of Newcastle’s historic downtown is about to be designated, well, historic, but officially now as the ...
Nearly two years after closing on their 1847 Stockton Springs Italianate, the Belvedere, Ryan Seavey and Casey Guise are still deep into renovations. Its gingerbread counterpart, meanwhile, was ...
For the first time in nearly four decades, a stunning Italianate steeped in Covington history is on the market. Known as ‘The Pointe,’ 420–422 Riverside Drive has maintained its enviable—and ...
The majestic Italianate home at 1006 Washington Ave. stands as a corner sentinel in New Orleans' Irish Channel neighborhood, the proud double-galleried, L-shape porches wrapping the white building in ...
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