Category
page 119th-century architectural styles
Renaissance Revival architecture
branch of 19th-century architectural revival style
baroque revival
architectural movement
Romanesque Revival architecture
style of building employed beginning in the mid-19th century
Victorian architecture
series of architectural revival styles
Beaux-Arts
19th century architectural style
Chicago School
American architectural style
Moorish Revival architecture
style in 19th-century European architecture and decorative arts characterized by Hispano-Moresque forms and motifs such as honey comb vaulting, arabesques, and horseshoe arches
Queen Anne style
architectural style
Mission Revival architecture
architectural movement, style
Richardsonian Romanesque
Romanesque Revival architectural style, named for Henry Hobson Richardson
Carpenter Gothic
architectural style
Shingle style architecture
plain American house style with little ornamentation
national Romantic style
Nordic architectural style
Collegiate Gothic
architectural style
châteauesque
thumb|250px|Château Frontenac, a hotel in [[Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, completed in 1893]]
thumb|250px|Biltmore Estate|Biltmore, a Vanderbilt house in [[Asheville, North Carolina, US, completed in 1895]]
thumb|250px|Massandra Palace, a Russian emperor's villa in [[Crimea, completed in 1900]]
thumb|250px|Stadium High School, a secondary school in [[Tacoma, Washington, USA, completed in 1906]]
Neo-Manueline
Neo-Manueline is a revival style of architecture which drew from the 16th century Manueline Late Gothic architecture of Portugal. Neo-Manueline constructions have been built across Portugal, Brazil, and the Lusophone world (the former Portuguese Empire).