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Spanish Colonial Revival architecture
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==List of example structures== [[File:Plaza del Lago IMG 7452 (cropped).jpg|thumb|[[Plaza del Lago]], [[Wilmette, Illinois]] (1920s)]] [[File:Stanford University 1978.jpg|thumb|right|[[Stanford University]]'s main quad]] [[File:Montclair State University (8563826766).jpg|thumb|right|Main entrance to [[Montclair State University]] in [[Montclair, New Jersey]]]] * [[California Quadrangle]] and El Prado, [[Balboa Park (San Diego)|Balboa Park]], [[San Diego, California]]: by Bertram Goodhue, for the [[Panama–California Exposition]] (1915-15). * [[Freedom Tower (Miami)|Freedom Tower]] ({{langx|es|Torre de la Libertad}}) in [[Miami, Florida]], was designed by [[Schultze and Weaver]] and originally served as the headquarters for ''[[The Miami News]]'', completed in 1925. * [[Casa del Herrero]], [[Montecito, California]], architects [[George Washington Smith (architect)|George Washington Smith]] and [[Lutah Maria Riggs]], 1926. * Several buildings at [[Montclair State University]] in [[Montclair, New Jersey]], the first being College Hall, constructed in 1908. * The current [[Museo de Arte Hispanoamericano Isaac Fernández Blanco]] or Noel Palace, designed by Martín Noel in [[Buenos Aires]], Argentina, 1920–1924. * The Main Quad and many buildings in the campus of [[Stanford University]], designed by [[Frederick Law Olmsted]], 1886–1891. *[https://web.archive.org/web/20070928032800/http://www.hispanic5.com/one_spanish_colonial_revival_architect_launched_a_california_style.htm "Casa Dracaena"] (a.k.a. ''El Hogar'' or Heberton House), George Washington Smith residence #1, 1916. * [[Glendale Southern Pacific Railroad Depot]], by Maurice Couchot & Kenneth MacDonald, Jr. in [[Glendale, California]], opened 1923. * [[Santa Barbara County Courthouse]], by William Mooser III, in [[Santa Barbara, California]], completed 1929. * [[George Fearn House]] in [[Mobile, Alabama]], completed 1904. * [https://books.google.com/books?id=MWA477c4ebAC&dq=%22F.+H.+Trimble%22&pg=PA48 Farmer's Bank] in [[Vero Beach, Florida]], completed in 1914. * [[Adamson House]], "Taj Mahal of Tile" by [[Stiles O. Clements]], in [[Malibu, California]], completed 1930. * [http://www.laokay.com/lathumb/laphoto/Adams06.jpg Alice Lynch Residence] in [[Los Angeles, California]], completed in 1922. * [[Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego|Marine Corps Recruit Depot]], [[San Diego, California]], 1917–1930. * [[Naval Training Center San Diego|Naval Training Center, San Diego, California]], completed 1923 (Buildings 1–26, and Officer's Quarters "A"-"D"). An expansion of recruit facilities in the same design language was completed in 1932 with the construction of the barracks at Camp Lawrence (Buildings 27-30). The final buildings built in the original Spanish Colonial Revival style were completed in 1942 with the opening of [[Stephen Luce|Camp Luce]], including new Administration, classroom, library, and recreation buildings. * [[Bathhouse Row#Quapaw|Quapaw Baths]] building in [[Bathhouse Row]], [[Hot Springs, Arkansas]], completed in 1922. * [[Coral Gables Congregational Church]] in [[Coral Gables, Florida]], was designed by the architect Richard Kiehnel of [[Kiehnel and Elliott]] in 1923. * [[Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (West Palm Beach, Florida)|Holy Trinity Episcopal Church]] in [[West Palm Beach, Florida]], was designed by [[L. Phillips Clarke]] of [[Harvey and Clarke]], completed 1924. * [[C.E. Toberman Estate]], by Russell & Alspagh, in [[Hollywood, California]], completed 1924. * [[Palm Beach Town Hall]] in [[Palm Beach, Florida]], by [[Harvey and Clarke]], completed 1925. * [http://www.laokay.com/lathumb/laphoto/scr12.jpg "Casa de las Campañas"] in [[Hancock Park, Los Angeles|Hancock Park]] district, [[Los Angeles, California]], completed in 1928. * [http://www.laokay.com/lathumb/laphoto/LWright210.jpg Frank H. Upham House] in [[Altadena, California]], completed 1928. * [[Azalea Court Apartments]] in Mobile, Alabama, completed in 1928. * [[Workman and Temple Family Homestead Museum|"La Casa Nueva"]], Workman and Temple Family Estate, in [[City of Industry, California]], completed 1927. * [[Castillo Serrallés]] in [[Ponce, Puerto Rico]], completed in the 1930s. * [[William S. Hart]] [http://www.laokay.com/lathumb/laphoto/Hart22.jpg "La Loma de los Vientos" Ranch], arch. [[Arthur Rolland Kelly|Arthur R. Kelly]], [[Newhall, California]], completed in the early 1920s. * [http://www.gaylordsuites.com Gaylord Suites] in [[San Francisco]], California, completed in 1928. * [[Randolph Air Force Base]] (various structures) near [[San Antonio]], Texas, designed in 1929. * [[Hollywood, Homewood, Alabama]], a 1926 residential development in [[Homewood, Alabama]]. * [[El Capitan Theatre]], Hollywood, built in 1928. * [[Scotty's Castle|"Death Valley Ranch"]], "Scotty's Castle", a landmark in [[Death Valley National Park]], which was begun in 1922 and had construction on the original design continue sporadically as late as 1943. * [[Scripps College]], by [[Gordon Kaufmann]] and [[Sumner Hunt]], in [[Claremont, California]], women's college and campus established in 1926 by [[Ellen Browning Scripps]]. * [[Annie Russell Theatre]], located on the premises of [[Rollins College]] in [[Winter Park, Florida]] was named after the [[England|English]]-born actress [[Annie Russell]] and was designed by Richard Kiehnel of [[Kiehnel and Elliott]], constructed in 1931. * [[Hamilton Air Force Base#Architectural significance|Hamilton Air Force Base]], in [[San Francisco Bay Area]] near [[Novato, California]], completed in 1934. * [[Pima County Courthouse]] in [[Tucson, Arizona]], designed by [[Roy Place]]. * [[Benedictine]] Monastery in [[Tucson, Arizona]], also designed by [[Roy Place]]. http://www.tucsonmonastery.com/ * [[Louis P. and Clara K. Best Residence and Auto House]], [[Clausen & Clausen]], [[Davenport, Iowa]], constructed in 1909. * [[Pasadena City Hall]], by [[Bakewell and Brown]], in [[Pasadena, California]], completed 1927. * [[Hortonville Community Hall]], by Robert Messmer, in [[Hortonville, Wisconsin]], built in 1912. * [[Thomas Jefferson Hotel]] in [[Birmingham, Alabama]], opened in 1929. * [[Adler Hotel]] in [[Sharon Springs, New York]], built in 1928.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kk26BwAAQBAJ&q=adler+hotel+sharon+springs+1927&pg=PA47|title=Sharon and Sharon Springs – Sharon Historical Society – Google Books |access-date=2017-04-24|isbn=9781467122757 |year=2015|publisher=Arcadia }}</ref> * [[El Reno Municipal Swimming Pool Bath House]] in [[El Reno, Oklahoma]], completed in 1935. * [[Plaza del Lago]] in [[Wilmette, Illinois]], completed in 1928 by Henry Gage<ref>{{cite book |last1=Shea |first1=Robert | title=[[From No Man's Land, To Plaza del Lago]] |year=1987 |publisher=American References Publishing Corporation |location=919 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL. 60611}}</ref> * [[Camarillo State Hospital]] in [[Camarillo, California]], first phase completed in 1936 by State Architect Howard Spencer Hazen, built to completion in 1957. With the hospital's closure in 1997, the site has been redeveloped into [[California State University Channel Islands]] (opened in 2002), with all the new college buildings retaining the Spanish Colonial Revival architecture and [[Mission Revival architecture]], except the [[John Spoor Broome Library]]—the only modern-style building on campus. * [[:pt:Antiga Estação Transmissora da Rádio Farroupilha|Antiga Estação Transmissora da Rádio Farroupilha]] (former Farroupilha Radio Broadcast Station), an example from [[Porto Alegre]], city in far southern [[Brazil]], opened in 1952, closed in 1986.
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