San Francisco: Victorian Architecture
Places and attractions in the Victorian architecture category
Categories
- Museum
- Park
- Nightlife
- Church
- Theater
- Concerts and shows
- Street
- Specialty museum
- Art museum
- Art gallery
- Historical place
- Shopping
- Dancing
- History museum
- Neighbourhood
- Monuments and statues
- Sacred and religious sites
- View point
- Shopping centre
- Playground
- Skyscraper
- Tower
- Music venue
- Lighthouse
- Library
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Cinema
- Garden
- Memorial
- Vernacular architecture
- Architecture
- Natural attraction
- Science museum
- Temple
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Bookshop
- Postmodern architecture
- Trail
- Square
- Forts and castles
- Performing arts
- Entertainment
- Boat or ferry
- Universities and schools
- Restaurant
- Island
- Lake
- Beach
- Concert hall
- Nature
- Sculpture
- Hiking trail
- Hiking
- Nature and wildlife
- Game and entertainment center
- Ship
- Golf
- Event space
- Piers and boardwalks
- Music and shows
- Synagogue
- Bars and clubs
- Modernist architecture
- Entertainment district
- Victorian architecture
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Romanesque architecture
- Queen Anne architecture
- Arenas and stadiums
- Tunnel
Forts Baker
Forts Baker, Barry, and Cronkhite near Sausalito, California is a combination of historic sites that, as a group, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. Fort Baker is a major part.
William Westerfeld House
The William Westerfeld House is a historic building located at 1198 Fulton Street in San Francisco, California, United States, across the street from the northwest corner of Alamo Square.
Alfred E. Clarke Mansion
The Alfred E. Clarke Mansion, also known as the Caselli Mansion, Nobby Clarke's Castle and Nobby Clarke's Folly, is a mansion at 250 Douglass Street on the corner of Caselli Avenue in Eureka Valley, San Francisco, California. Built in 1891 by Alfred "Nobby" Clarke, it has been a hospital and is now an apartment building.
Feusier Octagon House
The Feusier Octagon House is an historic octagonal house located at 1067 Green Street, in the Russian Hill neighborhood of San Francisco, California. It was built between 1857 and 1858 by George Kenny, who sold it in 1870 to Louis Feusier. It is San Francisco Landmark 36 and is one of two surviving octagon houses in the city.