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  2. Travertine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travertine

    Travertine is available in tile sizes for floor installations. [77] [78] Travertine is one of the most frequently used stones in modern architecture. It is commonly used for indoor home/business flooring, outdoor patio flooring, spa walls and ceilings, façades, and wall cladding.

  3. Whitney Tavern Stand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitney_Tavern_Stand

    The interior renovations included oak floors downstairs along with some floor plan changes, including the addition of bathrooms, and the addition of a simply detailed brick fireplace, with stone tile hearth, in the living room at the building's north end, with a large brick chimney stack outside against the north wall. Upstairs the former ...

  4. Dowling Apartment Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dowling_Apartment_Building

    The Dowlings themselves lived in the three-bedroom apartment A - one whole side of the first floor. The apartments were finished with mahogany doors, birds' eye maple floors, plaster walls and ceilings, hex tiles in the kitchens and bathrooms, Craftsman-style woodwork, built-in cupboards, dining room chandeliers, and a fireplace in each apartment.

  5. Morpeth House and Closebourne House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morpeth_House_and_Close...

    This is a simple rectangular stone building with sandstone walls, hipped gable roof and curved vents, and asbestos cement shingled roof in diagonal pattern. Internally, it has sandstone walls with cedar panelling behind pews, carpet on concrete floor, ceiling lined with hardboard, with timber battens and exposed timber purlins over timber ...

  6. Cyclopean masonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclopean_masonry

    Cyclopean masonry, backside of the Lion Gate, Mycenae, Greece. Cyclopean masonry is a type of stonework found in Mycenaean architecture, built with massive limestone boulders, roughly fitted together with minimal clearance between adjacent stones and with clay mortar or [1] no use of mortar.

  7. Shafston House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shafston_House

    The one-storey brick-and-stone residence features a highly pitched gabled roof, attic rooms and cellars. The walls rest on foundations of Brisbane tuff and the roof, once shingled and then slated, is clad with terracotta tiles. To the rear is the original detached brick service wing, also on a Brisbane tuff stone foundation. [1]