Ferro (iron) and vitreous (glass) construction combined the use of glass and iron in the eighteenth century and can be…
Fantastic architecture is an architectural style featuring attention-grabbing buildings. Such buildings can be considered as works of art, and are…
Timber framing and "post-and-beam" construction are traditional methods of building with heavy timbers, creating structures using squared-off and carefully fitted…
English Gothic is an architectural style originating in France, before then flourishing in England from about 1180 until about 1520.…
The Empire style is an early-nineteenth-century design movement in architecture, furniture, other decorative arts, and the visual arts, representing the…
Elizabethan architecture refers to buildings of aesthetic ambition constructed during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England and Ireland…
Egyptian revival is an architectural style that uses the motifs and imagery of ancient Egypt. It is attributed generally to…
Eclecticism is a nineteenth and twentieth-century architectural style in which a single piece of work incorporates a mixture of elements…
The Dresden school was a baroque Neo-Renaissance architectural style developed in Dresden, Germany, primarily by Gottfried Semper and Hermann Nicolai.…
Dissenting Gothic is an architectural style associated with English Dissenters, that is, Protestants not affiliated with the Church of England.…