Timeline of Architecture

11,600BC to 3,500BC was Pre-Hisotric Architecture

3,050BC to 900BC was Egyptian Architecture

850BC to 476AD was Classical Architecture

700BC to 323Bc was Greek Classical Architecture

323BC to 146BC was Hellenistic Architecture

44BC to 476AD was Roman Architecture

373AD to 500AD was Early Christian Architecture

527AD to 565AD was Byzantine Architecture

800AD to 1200AD was Romanesque Architecture

1100AD to 14500AD was Gothic Architecture

1400AD to 1600AD was Renaissance Architecture

1600AD to 1830AD was Baroque Architecture

1650AD to 1790AD was Rococco Architecture

1600AD to 1780AD was American Colonial Architecture

1720AD to 1800AD was Georgian Architecture

1730AD to 1925AD was Neo-Classical Architecture

1790AD to 1850AD was Greek Revival Architecture

1840AD to 1900AD was Victorian Architecture

1890AD to 1914AD was Art Nouveau Architecture

1895AD to 1925AD was Beaux Arts Architecture

1905AD to 1930AD was Neo-Gothic Architecture

1925AD to 1937AD was Art Deco Architecture

1900AD to Present is Modern Architecture

1972AD to Present is Postmodernism Architecture

1997 to Present is Neo-Modernism and Parametricism Architecture

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8 stone structure respresenting pre-historic architecture. Pyramids in the desert to represent egyptian architecture. A building built out of stone with nothing inside. 8 pillars in the front and rock steps upward to respresent greek classical architecture. A Roman roman amphitheater which is made out of stone with multiple levels of stairs downward to represent roman classical architecture. A barn type building to represent early christian architecture A castle with a tower on each corner and a colorscale of orange, blue, white, and light pink to respresent byzantine architecture. An open hallway with a series of openings with rounded arches to represent romanesque architecture. A large structure with a great amount of windows and pointy tops on the roof to represent gothic architecture A street with buildings on the ide leading up to a large building with a dome top to represent renaissance architecture. Water and rock below a large white quartz-made building. The building has 3 statues in the front and has hosre like structures atop the roof to represent baroque architecture. A large estate with a brick patht hat has plants adorning the side of the path. The estate has the colors of white, blue, and gold to represent rococco architecture. A white, grey, and black house with 3 windows atop the roof and a decently sized porch to represent american colonial architecture. A large estate home mae with brick, that has a balcony and a lot of windows to represent georgian architecture. An all white building with a dome top and a lot of tall and large pillars to represnt neo-classical architecture. A sketch of a house with pillars going around, lots of windows, and a roof thats looks like an airpost control center to represent greek revival architecture. A downward street of neighboring houses that have stairs to the front door, a couple of windows, and a shingled roof to represent victorian architecture. A multi-story building with windows and detailed fixings just below the roof all around to represent art nouveau architecture. An interior of a building with a large upward staricase that diverges left and right with a lot of chandeliers hanging to represent beaux-arts architecture. The top half of a building which has very limited windows and pointy-like structures going around the building to represent neo-gothic architecture. A tall building with repetitive window placings goin all the way up to represent art-deco architecture. A house with windows going around and a part of the house that is white and has a slanted roof to represent modern architecture. A building with cascading levels, made of mostly glass windows and the colors blue and white to represent post-modern architecture.

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Types of Architecture

There are multiple types of architecture that have developed over the years.


Gothic

Renaissance

Neoclassical

Baroque

Industrial

Modern

Contemporary

Brutalist

Tudor

Prairie School

Colonia

Deconstructivism

Expressionist

Sustainable

Dutch Revival

Italianate

Victorian


Design Plans Page

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