Mission Revival Style architecture
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The Mission Revival Style was an architectural movement that began in the late
All of California's missions shared certain design characteristics, owing both to the limited selection of building materials
available to the founding padres and an overall lack of advanced construction experience. Each installation utilized
massive walls with broad, unadorned surfaces and limited fenestration, wide, projecting eaves, and low-pitched
Each of these elements are replicated, to varying degrees, in Mission Revival buildings. Modern construction materials and building practices render these characteristics largely cosmetic, however.
- Plymouth Rock was a state of mind.
- So were the California Missions.
- Charles Fletcher Lummis
- The Spanish Pioneers, 1929
- Give me neither Romanesque nor Gothic;
- much less Italian Renaissance,
- and least of all English Colonial —
- this is California — give me Mission.
- Anonymous
A list of structures designed in the Mission Revival Style
- Burlingame Railroad Station in
Burlingame, California , completed in 1894 - Santa Fe Railway Depot in
San Juan Capistrano, California , completed in 1894 - Castañeda Hotel in Las Vegas, New Mexico, completed in 1898
- Alvarado Hotel in
Albuquerque, New Mexico , completed in 1902 (demolished1970 ) - Mission Inn in Riverside, California, completed in 1902
Union Station in San Diego, California, completed in 1915San Gabriel Civic Auditorium in San Gabriel, California, completed in1927 - Villa Rockledge in
Laguna Beach, California , completed in 1935 - Canoga Mission
Gallery in Canoga Park, California, completed in
1936
Gallery
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San Diego's |
One of the earliest examples of Mission Revival Style architecture, the Santa Fe depot in |
The former depot in San Juan Capistrano as it appeared in 2005. The plaster finish has been removed (exposing the brickwork beneath) at all but the dome of the original structure. |
The |
References
- Gustafson, Lee and Phil Serpico (1999). Santa Fe Coast Lines Depots: Los Angeles Division. Acanthus Press, Palmdale, CA. ISBN 0-88418-003-4.
- Jones, R. (1991). The History of Villa Rockledge. American National Research Institute, Laguna Beach, CA.
- Weitze, K. (1984). California's Mission Revival. Hennessy & Ingalls, Inc., Los Angeles, CA. ISBN 0-912158-89-1.
- Yenne, Bill (2004). The Missions of California. Thunder Bay Press, San Diego, CA. ISBN 1-59223-319-8.
See also
Mediterranean Revival Style architecture - Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture
External links
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