Los Angeles: Colonial Revival Architecture
Places and attractions in the Colonial revival architecture category
Categories
- Museum
- Park
- Theater
- Concerts and shows
- Church
- Shopping
- History museum
- Area
- Art gallery
- Shopping centre
- Art museum
- Specialty museum
- Historical place
- Music venue
- Nightlife
- Street
- Neighbourhood
- City
- Spanish colonial revival architecture
- Architecture
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Library
- Memorial
- Cemetery
- Concert hall
- Natural attraction
- Golf
- Nature
- Cinema
- Bridge
- Entertainment
- Skyscraper
- Performing arts
- Outdoor activities
- Synagogue
- Postmodern architecture
- Sacred and religious sites
- Garden
- Music and shows
- Hill
- Monuments and statues
- Modernist architecture
- Science museum
- Natural history museum
- Victorian architecture
- Temple
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Vernacular architecture
- Tower
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Event space
- Arenas and stadiums
- Romanesque architecture
- Beaux-Arts architecture
- Modern art museum
- Welton Becket
- Beach
- Tours
- Gambling
- Dancing
- Rock club
- Mountain
- Romanesque revival architecture
- Canyon
- Auditorium
- Sculpture
- Military museum
- Casino
- Universities and schools
- City hall
- Zoo
- Colonial revival architecture
- Art Deco architecture
- Streamline Moderne architecture
- Queen Anne architecture
- Neoclassical architecture
U.S. Post Office-Los Angeles Terminal Annex
The United States Post Office – Los Angeles Terminal Annex, also known simply as Terminal Annex, located at 900 North Alameda Street in Los Angeles, California, was the central mail processing facility for Los Angeles, from 1940 to 1989.
Granada Shoppes and Studios
Granada Shoppes and Studios, also known as the Granada Buildings, is an imaginative, Mediterranean Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival style block-long complex consisting of four courtyard-connected structures, in Central Los Angeles, California.
Birthplace of Adlai E. Stevenson II
Birthplace of Adlai E. Stevenson II is a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in the West Adams neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. The site was the birthplace of two-time US Presidential candidate Adlai E. Stevenson II, who was born there on February 5, 1900. The house was designed by C.W.
Eugene W. Britt House
Eugene W. Britt House is a three-story, red-brick Georgian Revival-Colonial Revival mansion built in 1910 in the West Adams district of Los Angeles, California.
St. Andrews Bungalow Court
St. Andrews Bungalow Court is a grouping of bungalows built in 1919–20 in the Colonial Revival style in Hollywood, California. Based on the structures' well-preserved multi-family courtyard architecture, the grouping was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.