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American architectural styles

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Gothic Revival
architectural movement
brutalist architecture
20th century style of architecture
Victorian architecture
series of architectural revival styles
Georgian architecture
set of architectural styles current between 1720 and 1840
Chicago School
American architectural style
log cabin
simple dwelling constructed of logs
Googie
form of post-modern architecture style, a subdivision of futurist architecture
Prairie School architecture
architectural style
log house
type of house, built from wooden logs; much the same as a log cabin
Painted Ladies
series of row houses in San Francisco, California, United States
Federal architecture
architectural style in USA (1780-1830)
architecture of the United States
broad variety of architectural styles
Spanish Colonial Revival architecture
architectural style
Mission Revival architecture
architectural movement, style
shotgun house
housing style common among lower/working class residents of the Southern United States
Richardsonian Romanesque
Romanesque Revival architectural style, named for Henry Hobson Richardson
Antebellum architecture
neoclassical architectural style characteristic of the 19th-century Southern United States
saltbox
building with a long, pitched roof that slopes down to the back
mid-century modern
architectural, interior, product, and graphic design of the mid-20th century
Carpenter Gothic
architectural style
octagon house
unique house style briefly popular in the 1850s in the United States and Canada
Colonial Revival architecture
American architectural style
Stripped Classicism
architectural style that consists of Classicist buildings, reduced to essences, with very little ornamentation, but with Classical proportions and shapes
American colonial architecture
building design styles associated with the colonial period of the United States
McMansion
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]]
Adirondack Architecture
American style of construction
Collegiate Gothic
architectural style
split-level home
style of house
Stick style
late-19th-century American architectural style
American Renaissance
art movement and architectural style
Mayan Revival architecture
modern Architectural style that draws inspiration from pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures
Pueblo Revival Style architecture
regional architectural style of the Southwestern United States
Queen Anne style architecture in the United States
architectural style during Victorian Era
Palazzo style architecture
imitative of Italian palazzi
Cape Cod
architectural style
Mediterranean Revival architecture
design style during the 20th century
American Craftsman
American domestic architectural, interior design, landscape design, applied arts, and decorative arts style and lifestyle
Jeffersonian architecture
American Palladian/Neoclassical architecture
Populuxe
thumb | right | alt=Rear view of a coral colored 1961 Buick with the license plate AINT PNK. | Example of the futuristic aesthetic of Populuxe. Populuxe was a consumer culture and aesthetic in the United States popular in the 1950s and 1960s. The term populuxe is a portmanteau of popular and luxury.
Sarasota School of Architecture
architectural style
rustic architecture
style of architecture in the United States, used in rural government and private structures and their landscape interior design