Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Monument Circle Historic District is a national historic district located at Warsaw in Wyoming County, New York. The district consists of 18 acres (73,000 m 2) and includes a broad range of architecturally significant resources. It encompasses 21 late 19th and early 20th century civic, religious, and domestic properties.
Warsaw Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Warsaw in Wyoming County, New York. The district encompasses 36 contributing buildings in the village of Warsaw. They are a variety of commercial, institutional, and religious buildings with most built between the 1870s and 1915.
Warsaw is a town in Wyoming County, in the U.S. state of New York. The population was 5,316 at the 2020 census. [ 2 ] It is located approximately 37 miles east southeast of Buffalo and approximately 37 miles southwest of Rochester .
William W. Clark (born 1940) is an emeritus professor of art history in the medieval studies program at the Graduate Center at Queens College, City University of New York. [1] He is a widely published expert on early medieval, Romanesque, and Gothic art and architecture.
Seth M. Gates House is a historic home located at Warsaw in Wyoming County, New York.It is a two-story, wood-frame dwelling built in 1824 and expanded in about 1843. It started as a two-story, five-bay dwelling and the expansion added two bays on the north end.
Avery Library's collection in architecture literature is among the largest in the world and includes such highlights as the first Western printed book on architecture, De re aedificatoria (1485), by Leone Battista Alberti; Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (1499); works by Giovanni Battista Piranesi; and classics of modernism by Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier, with the rarest ...
The Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP) is the architecture school of Columbia University, a private research university in New York City. It is also home to the Masters of Science program in Advanced Architectural Design, Historic Preservation, Real Estate Development, Urban Design, and Urban Planning.
The current editor is David Karmon, a professor at Holy Cross. The journal's issues include scholarly articles on international topics in architectural history, book reviews, architectural exhibition reviews, field notes, and editorials on the relationship between the built environment, its study, and interdisciplinary topics. [3] [4]