Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

  1. Anuncio

    relacionado con: carlton house architecture
  2. Client Focused Architecture, Engineering, & Design Throughout the Midwest & Beyond. Creating Unparalleled Client Service & fulfilling Careers Since 1895.

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Carlton House, sometimes Carlton Palace, was a mansion in Westminster, best known as the town residence of King George IV, particularly during the regency era and his time as prince regent. It faced the south side of Pall Mall, and its gardens abutted St James's Park in the St James's district of London.

  2. Carlton House; Localización; País: Reino Unido: Ubicación: ciudad de Westminster: Coordenadas: Información general; Estilo: arquitectura georgiana: Diseño y construcción; Arquitecto: Henry Holland

  3. 6 de feb. de 2016 · The Hall of Entrance, Carlton House, from The History of the Royal Residencesby WH Pyne (1819). Octagonal Vestibule. The Vestibule was octagonal in shape. On three sides, it had arches leading to the Grand Staircase, the Great Hall and the State Apartments; on a fourth side, a closed-in arch displayed a chimneypiece with a bust of the Prince of Condé and an enormous mirror.

  4. Carlton House Terrace is a street in the St James's district of the City of Westminster in London. Its principal architectural feature is a pair of terraces, the Western and Eastern terraces, of white stucco-faced houses on the south side of the street, which overlook The Mall and St. James's Park.

  5. Carlton House. L.W. Cowie takes the reader on a visit to London's Carlton House; an architectural gem with many royal connections and which was converted into a palace for the future George IV. The history of Carlton House, the shortest-lived and yet the most tasteful and exquisite of London’s vanished royal residences, began in 1709 when the ...

  6. Designed as an architectural entity, facing the Park, they represent with their range of detached Corinthian columns, a pleasing example of comprehensive street architecture; an effect greatly enhanced by the freshness of their façades, which are maintained at a uniform stone colour by periodical paintings.

  7. A Classical Design for Carlton House c.1814. Mixed media | 70.4 x 142.5 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 406951. Description. The Prince of Wales (later George IV) ‘took up’ John Nash in 1813 in the same year that his previous favourite architect, James Wyatt (1746-1813) died.