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