neo-Renaissance building
C12740
concept
A neo-Renaissance building is a structure designed in the 19th- or early 20th-century revival style that emulates Italian Renaissance architecture through features like symmetrical façades, round-arched windows, classical columns, and richly ornamented cornices.
All labels observed (5)
| Label | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| neo-Renaissance building canonical | 5 |
| Renaissance Revival building | 4 |
| Renaissance Revival architecture | 3 |
| Renaissance Revival architecture building | 1 |
| Spanish Renaissance Revival building | 1 |
Description generation (CDg)
The one-sentence description above was generated by prompting gpt-5.1 with the class name and this instruction.
Instruction
generate a one-sentence description for a given conceptual class. # Response Format Return only the sentence: "Description: [one-sentence description of the conceptional class]"
Input
Class: neo-Renaissance building
Generated description
A neo-Renaissance building is a structure designed in the 19th- or early 20th-century revival style that emulates Italian Renaissance architecture through features like symmetrical façades, round-arched windows, classical columns, and richly ornamented cornices.
Instances (14)
| Instance | Via concept surface |
|---|---|
| McKim Building | Renaissance Revival architecture |
| University Club of New York building | Renaissance Revival architecture |
| Corcoran Gallery of Art (original building) | Renaissance Revival building |
| UST Main Building | Renaissance Revival building |
| Villard Houses | Renaissance Revival building |
| Drechsler Palace | — |
| Pension Building | Renaissance Revival architecture |
| Ponce de Leon Hotel | Spanish Renaissance Revival building |
| Pittsburgh Athletic Association building | Renaissance Revival architecture building |
| University of Vienna main building | — |
| McEwan Hall, University of Edinburgh | Renaissance Revival building |
| Hungarian Academy of Sciences headquarters building | — |
| House of the Estates, Helsinki | — |
| Rudolfinum | — |