Los Angeles: Romanesque Revival Architecture
Places and attractions in the Romanesque 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
Wilshire Boulevard Temple
Wilshire Boulevard Temple, known from 1862 to 1933 as Congregation B'nai B'rith, is the oldest Jewish congregation in Los Angeles, California.
Doheny Library
The Edward L. Doheny Jr. Memorial Library is a library located in the center of campus at the University of Southern California. After the shooting of his son, the Irish American oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny donated $1.1 million in 1932 to USC to build the Doheny Library. It was designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram.
Wadsworth Chapel
Wadsworth Chapel, also known as the Catholic-Protestant Chapels, is actually two separate chapels under one roof on the campus of the Dept. of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in West Los Angeles, California.
Washington Irving Branch
Washington Irving Branch is a branch library of the Los Angeles Public Library, located west of downtown Los Angeles at 4117 West Washington Boulevard, Los Angeles. The original building housing the branch is listed on the National Register of Historic Places but has been vacant and fenced for several years.
Frederick Mitchell Mooers House
The Frederick Mitchell Mooers House, also known as the Wright-Mooers House, is an ornately detailed Victorian house built in 1894 at 818 South Bonnie Brae Street in the Westlake area of Los Angeles, California.
Frederick Hastings Rindge House
The Frederick Hastings Rindge House is a historic house located in the West Adams district of Los Angeles, in Los Angeles County, California. The Rindge House was built in 1904 for Frederick H. Rindge and wife Rhoda May Knight Rindge and designed by Frederick Louis Roehrig and E.C.
Zumberge Hall of Science
Zumberge Hall of Science, commonly known as ZHS, is one of the original buildings of the University of Southern California's University Park Campus, completed in 1928.