Category
page 1Buildings and structures destroyed during World War II
Sándor Palace
building in Budapest and official residence of the President of Hungary
Stone Bridge
historical stone bridge in Tartu

Carltheater
thumb|The Carltheater in 1850
The Carltheater was a theatre in Vienna. It was in the suburbs in Leopoldstadt at Praterstraße 31 (at that time called Jägerzeile).
Municipal Theatre of Corfu
former theatre in Corfu, Greece, destroyed by bombs in 1943, remains demolished in 1952
Nykirken
Nykirken () is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Bergen Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. It is located in the Nordnes area of the city of Bergen. It is one of the churches for the Bergen Cathedral parish which is part of the Bergen domprosti (arch-deanery) in the Diocese of Bjørgvin.
Kasteel Bleijenbeek
château in Afferden, Netherlands
Ciné Rex
cinema in Antwerp, Belgium
Hotel Metropole, Vienna
hotel in Vienna
King Alexander Bridge
bridge in Belgrade, Serbia
National Hauszmann Project
ongoing reconstruction of buildings in the Castle district of Budapest, Hungary
Scholtenshuis
The Scholtenhuis (or Scholtenshuis) was a well-known and infamous building located in the centre of Groningen, the Netherlands, on the eastern side of the Grote Markt. It was constructed between 1878 and 1881 in an eclectic style by the Groningen architect Jan Maris for the industrialist Willem Albert Scholten. The property consisted of two connected houses occupied by two generations of the Scholten family: W.A. Scholten and his son Jan Evert Scholten. Of the original complex, only the former carriage house with chauffeur's apartment at 8 remains, featuring an “S” above the entrance referring
Iron Bridge
former bridge that crossed the Daugava river in Riga, the capital of Latvia