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  2. Jose Eusebio Boronda Adobe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jose_Eusebio_Boronda_Adobe

    The Boronda Adobe is a Spanish Colonial adobe, with a wood-shingled roof, wrap-around porches, open beamed ceilings, and two indoor fireplaces. [4] [3] It was built by José Eusebio Boronda between 1844 and 1848. The adobe is located on Boronda Road, northwest of Salinas, California.

  3. Spanish Colonial Revival architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Colonial_Revival...

    Spanish Colonial Revival architecture is characterized by a combination of detail from several eras of Spanish Baroque, Spanish Colonial, Moorish Revival and Mexican Churrigueresque architecture. The style is marked by the prodigious use of smooth plaster ( stucco ) wall and chimney finishes, low- pitched clay tile , shed, or flat roofs, and ...

  4. De Vargas Street House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Vargas_Street_House

    The De Vargas Street House is a two-story adobe building; the first floor is original and the second floor was reconstructed based on the original in the 1920s. Most of the house is constructed from adobe brick, which was a Spanish colonial technology, while a few lower wall sections are puddled adobe characteristic of pre-Spanish pueblo buildings.

  5. House of the Day: David Hyde Pierce's Spanish Palace - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2012-02-21-house-of-the-day...

    With 1920s-Spanish features like a grand rotunda entrance, a stunning baronial fireplace, and a gorgeous spiral staircase rising to a stained glass ceiling, the home is anything but your typical ...

  6. Adamson House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adamson_House

    Architectural historians refer to the style as a synthesis of Spanish Colonial Revival and Moorish Revival architecture. The house features teak woodworking, fireplaces in several interior and outdoor patio rooms, handpainted ceilings, lead-framed bottle glass windows, and "wrought-iron filigrees fitting over the windows like intricate jewelry."

  7. Spanish Colonial architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Colonial_architecture

    The traza or layout was the pattern on which Spanish American cities were built beginning in the colonial era. At the heart of Spanish colonial cities was a central plaza, with the main church, town council (cabildo) building, residences of the main civil and religious officials, and the residences of the most important residents (vecinos) of ...