Architecture
Found in 40 Collections and/or Records:
Charles Herring renderings of Grabhorn Press Building
Pencil-and-watercolor drawings of the Grabhorn Press Building in San Francisco, California, one each showing the building's interior and exterior. The interior drawing bears the caption: "Proposed Alterations - The Grabhorn Press, Charles Herring 5-6-35".
Dell Ashworth architectural drawings collection
Joseph M. Bauman collection of photographs of Utah
Janet Roberts Blamforth papers
Brigham Young Academy building plans
Contains building plans with renderings, elevations, floor plans, and cross-sections. Includes framed copies as well as enlarged sheets of images.
Connelly family photographs of Mormon temples and Provo Tabernacle
Contains a computer disk with digital images of the Latter-day Saint Nauvoo Temple, Orlando Florida Temple, Preston England Temple, Washington DC Temple, and Provo Tabernacle. There are also prints of these images. These were printed by the Photograph Archives. Materials dated 2008 to 2009.
David O. McKay School of Education physical facilities records, 1970-2000
Contains physical facilities records regarding the rededication of the David O. McKay Building and management of facilities associated with the college. Materials date from 1970-2000.
Drafting tools set of Brigham Young
This collection is an English drafting tools set that was originally owned and used by Brigham Young to design the streets and building plans for Salt Lake City, Utah. The set was also used by Oliver I. Lay for the creation of a studio commissioned by his father-in-law, Mahonri Mackintosh Young, to create the This is the Place Monument. Materials dated approximately 1847-1877.
Emil B. Fetzer architectural rendering of the Provo Temple
Architectural rendering of the Provo Temple by Emil B. Fetzer. The rendering has been affixed to a cardboard sheet and is in color. The item is undated.
Heimatbilder aus der Geschichte der Stadt Michelstadt im Odenwald 741-1914
Handwritten book manuscript in German probably reproduced by some photo-mechanical process. The item is a history of Michelstadt with a special emphasis on the architectural development of the city. The book was probably written largely by Philipp Buxbaum (1843- ) but was put into its final form around 1948.