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Architecture in the Gilded Age
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Gilded Age Architecture: Tale of Two Cities
New York and Frederic Law Olmstead VS. Chicago and Louis Sullivan, DH Burnam
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Chicago Auditorium, Sullivan and Adler, 1887
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Carson, Pirie, and Scott Dept Store, Chicago, Sullivan and Adler, 1899
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Other Chicago School Buildings
Reliance Building, Burnam and Root, 1894 Masonic Temple, Burnam and Root, 1891
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Railway Exchange, DH Burnam, 1904
Columbus Memorial Building, WW Boyington, 1891
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Bayard-Condict Building, Louis Sullivan (in Chicago School Style), 1899
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NY Tribune Bldg, 1873 NY Times, 1858 NY World Building, 1890 Famous Newpaper Row on Park Row Street
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Park Row Building, HR Robertson, 1899
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The Flatiron Building, Daniel Burnam, 1902
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Central Park, Frederic Law Olmstead
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The Dakota Apts, 1880, N. German Renaissance Style
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Macy’s Dept Store, 1901, Richardsonian Romanesque
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St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Neo-Gothic, 1881, James Renwick
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Brooklyn Bridge, opened in 1903
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Vanderbilt Mansion, Hyde Park, NY, 1895, Greek Revival
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Rockefeller Mansion, Tarrytown, NY, 1913
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Biltmore, Ashville, NC, 1895, French Renaissance style
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Summer Houses of the Rich and Famous during the Gilded Age
The Breakers, Newport, RI, 1893 for Cornelius Vanderbilt, a Gilded Age Architectural Archetype or mix of styles focused on opulence
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The Marble House, Newport, 1888, for grandson of Vanderbilt, Beaux Arts style
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The Elms, Newport, RI, for Julius Berwind (coal magnate), 1901, Classical Revival
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