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Architecture Trivia

Architecture Trivia Quizzes

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This category covers a wide range of topics from ancient times through the present! Come and explore the different styles!
62 Architecture quizzes and 868 Architecture trivia questions.
Sub-Categories:
1.
  The Wright Architecture   great trivia quiz  
Collection Quiz
 10 Qns
Frank Lloyd Wright was referred to as the best architect of the twentieth century. There are twenty architectural masterpieces in this quiz for you to pick the masterpieces designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
Easier, 10 Qns, pennie1478, Dec 03 23
Easier
pennie1478 gold member
Dec 03 23
287 plays
2.
Ten Architectural Niches Around the World
  Ten Architectural Niches Around the World   top quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
Architecture has changed drastically over the centuries. Take this quiz and visit ten different schools of architecture, exploring general aesthetics and the like. Good luck!
Average, 10 Qns, kyleisalive, Sep 14 23
Average
kyleisalive editor
Sep 14 23
2670 plays
3.
Elementary Architecture
  Elementary Architecture   popular trivia quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
Don't know much about architecture? Don't worry - this is a very elementary quiz.
Very Easy, 10 Qns, daver852, Dec 02 14
Very Easy
daver852 gold member
1232 plays
4.
Let Me Spark Your Interest in Architecture
  Let Me Spark Your Interest in Architecture!   popular trivia quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
Here are ten questions, complete with illustrations, about some of the architectural elements found in varying types of structures. You might be surprised how many of them you know.
Average, 10 Qns, dcpddc478, Jun 06 16
Average
dcpddc478
2451 plays
5.
State Capitol Revolution
  State Capitol Revolution   popular trivia quiz  
Photo Match
 10 Qns
Architecture of State Capitols
In this quiz, see if you can identify ten different state capitols. There will be four capitols with Neo-Classical designs (like the U.S. Capitol), four capitols with Art Deco designs and two capitols with unique designs.
Average, 10 Qns, RedHook13, May 11 23
Average
RedHook13 gold member
May 11 23
176 plays
6.
UK Art Deco Gems
  UK Art Deco Gems   best quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
This quiz covers just a few of the UK's Art Deco buildings from around England. Even if you don't know the answers, you should enjoy the photos.
Average, 10 Qns, rossian, Jul 01 19
Average
rossian editor
Jul 01 19
344 plays
7.
Thoroughly Modern Architecture
  Thoroughly Modern Architecture    
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
There is not a castle or ancient building in sight when you take this quiz about modern architecture of the last century.
Average, 10 Qns, Plodd, Apr 26 18
Average
Plodd
Apr 26 18
702 plays
8.
Tales of the Usonian House
  Tales of the Usonian House   great trivia quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
Recently I had the good fortune to take a tour of a Usonian house. I enjoyed it so much, I just had to share what I learned with you!
Average, 10 Qns, ponycargirl, Sep 06 22
Average
ponycargirl editor
Sep 06 22
441 plays
9.
Know Your Architectural Styles
  Know Your Architectural Styles   popular trivia quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
There are many styles of architecture. Can you identify them from the photographic example and clues such as dates and location?
Average, 10 Qns, EnglishJedi, Apr 24 15
Average
EnglishJedi gold member
626 plays
10.
Art Deco Architecture Down Under
  Art Deco Architecture Down Under   great trivia quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
This is a sequel to Bernie73's quiz on US Art Deco architecture. This quiz features Art Deco buildings from another part of the world and specifically covers the diversity of range of building types.
Average, 10 Qns, 1nn1, Jun 25 19
Average
1nn1 gold member
Jun 25 19
281 plays
trivia question Quick Question
The Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize is named after Sir James Frazer Stirling. In which year was it first awarded?

From Quiz "A Very Stirling Affair"




11.
The Wall
  The Wall   popular trivia quiz  
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
As I walk down a tranquil English lane, I notice an old stone wall snaking across distant fields as far as the eye can see. I follow the wall to see where it will take me, learning its secrets as I go along. Come and join me on my voyage of discovery.
Tough, 10 Qns, Plodd, Jul 18 16
Tough
Plodd
448 plays
12.
  The Thirteenth Floor    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Or how to build a skyscraper in 10 easy steps.
Tough, 10 Qns, bucknallbabe, Dec 20 20
Tough
bucknallbabe
Dec 20 20
6283 plays
13.
An Architectural Tour of Bombay
  An Architectural Tour of Bombay    
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
Bombay (now known as Mumbai) is a potpourri of various different cultures, a fact which is also reflected in the different types of buildings found here. Take a look at some of the architectural styles the city is home to.
Average, 10 Qns, zorba_scank, Nov 13 14
Average
zorba_scank
515 plays
14.
Going For Baroque
  Going For Baroque   popular trivia quiz  
Photo Match
 10 Qns
Of the ten buildings featured in this quiz, most of them are Baroque, so you'd do best to assume. That said, can you identify which of them exhibit this architectural style and which just seem rich alternatives? Good luck!
Average, 10 Qns, kyleisalive, Jun 03 23
Average
kyleisalive editor
Jun 03 23
126 plays
15.
  Bits of Architecture editor best quiz   great trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 15 Qns
Okay, so maybe George Costanza (as his alter-ego, architect Art Vandelay) wouldn't know these answers, but if you do, GO FOR IT! I throw down the proverbial glove.
Tough, 15 Qns, lsvitko, Jul 29 15
Tough
lsvitko
6306 plays
16.
  Preserving Historic Buildings editor best quiz   great trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 15 Qns
This quiz takes a look at techniques of historic preservation from diagnosis to cure.
Average, 15 Qns, kaddarsgirl, Apr 14 14
Average
kaddarsgirl gold member
1178 plays
17.
  A Very Stirling Affair   popular trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
A look at the history of the Stirling Prize, one of the most prestigious awards in Architecture.
Average, 10 Qns, Christinap, Oct 05 13
Average
Christinap
2149 plays
18.
  The Sydney Opera House   great trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Welcome to the Sydney Opera House. This quiz asks you ten question about the construction of that grand old girl primly supervising all that goes on in Sydney Harbour, in New South Wales, Australia.
Average, 10 Qns, Creedy, May 11 14
Average
Creedy gold member
465 plays
19.
  Key to the Door   great trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Who would have thought doors could be so interesting? Here are ten facts on same to open up your mind. Have fun!
Average, 10 Qns, Creedy, Jan 23 13
Average
Creedy gold member
855 plays
20.
  Architecturally Sound   popular trivia quiz  
Match Quiz
 10 Qns
Some of these buildings have stood the test of time and are from all different periods, encompassing many different styles of architecture. Can you match each architectural style with a building in that style?
Average, 10 Qns, lones78, Apr 27 19
Average
lones78 gold member
Apr 27 19
227 plays
21.
The Truth About Greek and Roman Engineering
  The Truth About Greek and Roman Engineering    
Photo Quiz
 10 Qns
The ancient Greeks and Romans were masters of engineering, building structures that have lasted two millenia. Can you identify these famous examples and construction techniques?
Average, 10 Qns, AlexT781, Apr 22 18
Average
AlexT781
Apr 22 18
295 plays
22.
  Victorian Architecture    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
This is a quiz about Victorian architecture. I have kept the quiz's focus on the style's beginnings in England, though its influence became worldwide. I hope you enjoy the quiz!
Average, 10 Qns, ReginTollefsen, Jul 09 21
Average
ReginTollefsen
Jul 09 21
189 plays
23.
  Anatomy of a Thai Wat   great trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
The Buddhist temples called wats to be found in Thailand have some features which are common to most Buddhist temples, and some which are unique to the Thai architectural style.
Average, 10 Qns, looney_tunes, Apr 03 18
Average
looney_tunes editor
Apr 03 18
279 plays
24.
  Is Anybody Home?   popular trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
You're driving through a quiet suburban neighborhood, admiring the beautiful homes and wondering how such houses came to be. Open the quiz door and step inside to learn how it's done. Is anybody home?
Average, 10 Qns, kaddarsgirl, Jun 14 19
Average
kaddarsgirl gold member
Jun 14 19
688 plays
25.
  Bauhaus    
Multiple Choice
 15 Qns
Let's see how you match up with one of the world's most famous artistic movements - Bauhaus!
Average, 15 Qns, bdiggory, Aug 09 12
Average
bdiggory
1083 plays
26.
  Arc-Aztec-Ture   top quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
In this Author Challenge, (only Kyleisalive could have dreamed up such a title), we look at the majestic architecture of the Aztec civilisation.
Average, 10 Qns, 1nn1, Jul 09 19
Average
1nn1 gold member
Jul 09 19
219 plays
27.
  Architecture 101    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
This quiz deals with some basics of architecture. How many can you identify?
Average, 10 Qns, lowtechmaster, Aug 19 17
Average
lowtechmaster
757 plays
28.
  "Quotable" Architecture   popular trivia quiz  
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
This quiz features quotes - some well known and some less known -- from (primarily) 20th century architects. Can you match them all?
Tough, 10 Qns, rebekb, Nov 26 23
Tough
rebekb
Nov 26 23
1459 plays
29.
  Random Architectural History    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
A brief quiz of random questions concerning architecture throughout the ages. All multiple choice.
Tough, 10 Qns, vikan, Mar 21 13
Tough
vikan
4363 plays
30.
  Takin' My Time    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Let's journey around the world to look at fascinating timepieces. Well, that's providing that you've got a minute! (authors challenge suggestion by kyleisalive)
Average, 10 Qns, funnytrivianna, Sep 06 24
Average
funnytrivianna gold member
Sep 06 24
656 plays
31.
  What's in a Home?    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Our homes are built with architectural details that have very specific but somewhat obscure names. How many of these components are you able to figure out?
Average, 10 Qns, Betenoire, Jul 16 21
Average
Betenoire
Jul 16 21
290 plays
32.
  Art Deco in the United States    
Match Quiz
 10 Qns
The art deco style of architecture was very common in the first half of the 20th century. Match these ten art deco buildings with the brief description.
Tough, 10 Qns, bernie73, May 30 19
Tough
bernie73 gold member
May 30 19
186 plays
33.
  Architectural Skeletons    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Most buildings aren't what they seem. A 'stone' building is usually a thin layer of cut stone applied to a skeleton of wood, steel or cheaper stone. I'll give you an architectural work, and you guess what the skeleton or structure is really made of.
Tough, 10 Qns, savichal, Apr 20 24
Tough
savichal
Apr 20 24
2169 plays
34.
  Dutch Canal Houses    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
The Netherlands are well known for their canals, which are situated in virtually every Dutch city. This is a quiz on the architecture of the houses built along these canals. How much do you know about these skinny, yet interesting buildings?
Tough, 10 Qns, Obergon, Jul 21 19
Tough
Obergon
Jul 21 19
205 plays
35.
  Deconstructivism    
Multiple Choice
 15 Qns
One of the most interesting styles of Architecture to emerge in the 20th Century! Let's see how much you know about this prolific style that is still being designed today.
Average, 15 Qns, bdiggory, Oct 24 12
Average
bdiggory
909 plays
36.
  Building Nicknames    
Multiple Choice
 10 Qns
Many architectural wonders attempt to achieve notoriety by the novelty of their design or their beauty. Sometimes the public has different ideas and a nickname sticks that the builders never intended. Which of these do you recognize?
Difficult, 10 Qns, jstagamtome, Feb 27 09
Difficult
jstagamtome
2047 plays
Related Topics

Architecture Trivia Questions

1. In architectural terms, where would you most likely find a finial?

From Quiz
What's in a Home?

Answer: At the high point of a roof, dome or cupola

Derived from the Latin "finis" meaning "the end", finials are often the highest point on any given structure. Often thought to be used as lightning rods, finials are in fact a strictly decorative elements and can be made of stone, wood or metal.

2. The Aztec civilization was a thriving Mesoamerican culture that occupied a specific time and place in the history of the Americas. When and where?

From Quiz Arc-Aztec-Ture

Answer: Valley of Mexico, 14th - 16th centuries CE

The Aztec era lasted from around 1300 to 1521. The Aztecs were a culturally heterogeneous people united by the common language called Nahuatl. Aztec culture was organized into city-states which formed a confederation of three city-states to establish Tenochtitlan: city-state of the Mexica or Tenochca; Texcoco; and Tlacopan. Aztec culture shared elements with other central American cultures such as: Social divisions between nobility and common people, the cultivation of maize, a polytheism (featuring Tezcatlipoca, Tlaloc and Quetzalcoatl), and a calendar system of a year ofof 365 days alternating with a tonalpohualli (a count of 20 periods of 13 days each ruled by a different deity) of 260 days. Unique to the Tenochtitlan people was the patron God Huitzilopochtli, twin pyramid structures, and a distinctive ceramic ware used amongst its people.

3. What architectural feature of a Thai Buddhist temple is the source of its Thai name, 'wat'?

From Quiz Anatomy of a Thai Wat

Answer: Wall around the outside

The word 'wat' means enclosure, and is used for Buddhist temples in Laos, Cambodia and Thailand. The wall around the outside of the temple complex is meant to show its separation from the secular world around it. Inside the wall, there are two general regions: the 'Phutthawat', which is set aside for the active worship of Buddha, and the 'Sangkhawat', where the living quarters and some other functional buildings are located.

4. Gothic architecture is characterized by which traits?

From Quiz Architecture 101

Answer: Pointed arch, flying buttress, ribbed vault

Gothic architecture originated in France in the 12th Century and was popular into the 16th Century. Art Deco had bold geometric shapes, lavish ornamentation,and vibrant colors. Neoclassic generally replicated Classical with the emphasis on the wall. And Baroque used light, illusory effects, and ceiling frescoes.

5. Dutch canal houses are often very narrow, in order to accommodate as many (ware)houses along the canals as possible. In Amsterdam however, there was another reason for building houses as narrow as possible. What reason?

From Quiz Dutch Canal Houses

Answer: Taxation: tax was paid according to the width of the canal house

Canal houses in Amsterdam were taxed according to their width. Along the wealthiest parts of the canals in Amsterdam (for example the Gouden Bocht or Golden Bend), rich people would build wide palaces-like houses - they could afford the higher taxes. Defensive aspects were not important in building canal houses, the most important aspects were living and storing goods. There are examples of "city castles" in the Netherlands (some of them along canals, i.e. Utrecht), but these defensive structures are not found in Amsterdam. When a flood would cause the dikes to collapse, the city would be submerged in one or two meters of sea water. For this purpose, the doors to many canal houses are raised and are only accessible by climbing a flight of stairs in front of the house. This however didn't have to do do anything with building high, narrow houses. The upper stories of many (if not all) canal houses were only for stocking goods, not for people to live during floods.

6. Named after a local aborigine who lived from 1764 until 1813, can you tell me where the unusually designed Sydney Opera House is located in Sydney?

From Quiz The Sydney Opera House

Answer: Bennelong Point

Bennelong was more or less kidnapped by the early Europeans who settled Australia, and taken to our first governor, Arthur Phillip. The peculiar reason given for his enforced journey to Government House was that Governor Phillip wanted to establish cordial relationships with the local aboriginal people who lived in the Port Jackson area. A strange way to go about such an aim, it's true, but it did work to a degree. Bennelong was quite a character, a bit of a rogue, but extremely intelligent and quite adept at turning events to his favour over the years that followed. This included his request to have Phillip's men build him a comfortable hut on an area of land overlooking Sydney Harbour. Since that time, this prime piece of land has been known as Bennelong Point. It is here that the Sydney Opera House was built some 150 years later.

7. The Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize is named after Sir James Frazer Stirling. In which year was it first awarded?

From Quiz A Very Stirling Affair

Answer: 1996

The Stirling Prize is much younger than people often think. It is named after Sir James Frazer Stirling, who is generally accepted to be one of the most influential architects of the second half of the 20th century. Prior to 1996 architects were given The Building of the Year Award. His designs include the Andrew Melville Hall, St Andrews, and the History Faculty Building at Cambridge. The prize is the architectural equivalent of the Booker Prize, and is the one that every architect wants on their c.v. The winner is chosen from six short listed buildings and these buildings and the award ceremony receive much media coverage.

8. With reference to the Bible, of which wood were the doors of the *inner* sanctuary of King Solomon's temple made?

From Quiz Key to the Door

Answer: Olive wood

Most of the wood used in the manufacture of the interior of the temple was either cedar or cypress, and beautifully carved with cherubim, palm trees, buds, open flowers, and then inlaid with gold. In the inner sanctuary the doors were specifically made of olive wood, and carved and inlaid in the same manner. The entire structure must have been very beautiful. The stone outer walls, and any stone used elsewhere in the construction, was hewn and carved in the quarry so that no sound of hammering or chiseling could be heard in the temple. The two huge free-standing cherubim in the inner sanctuary were also manufactured from olive wood. All details of the construction methods and the materials used in the construction of this extraordinary building can be found in the Hebrew Bible in 1 Kings.

9. In 1852 the Shepherd Gate clock, which is located at Greenwich, was installed. It was the first clock to provide us with GMT. Which time is situated at the bottom of this clock?

From Quiz Takin' My Time

Answer: Noon

This clock which provides us with Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is a twenty-four hour clock. Because of this, the hour of noon is at the bottom of the clock face. The Shepherd Gate Clock is located at Greenwich, London, England. The clock is mounted on the outer wall of the Royal Greenwich Observatory. Charles Shepherd constructed and installed this clock in 1852.

10. What is the endearing nickname given to the glass dome on the Reichstag building in Berlin?

From Quiz Building Nicknames

Answer: the cheese cover

The transparent dome literally and symbolically enables the people to peer down on their legislators at work, in order to never again allow their liberties to be curtailed by the government.

11. "A chair is a very difficult object. A skyscraper is almost easier. That is why Chippendale is famous." What architect of the tall said this?

From Quiz "Quotable" Architecture

Answer: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969) was a German-American master of modern architecture, known for his connections to both the Bauhaus School and International Style. The Seagram building in New York and IBM Plaza in Chicago are examples of the steel-and-glass "skin and bones" skyscrapers he pioneered. This quote appeared in Time Magazine, Feb. 18, 1957. Quote source: http://architecture.about.com/library/bl-mies-quotes.htm

12. The column order called __________ has capitals of Ionic volutes and Corinthian acanthus-leaf decorations?

From Quiz Random Architectural History

Answer: Composite

The Composite Order was a late Roman development of the Corinthian Order.

13. A glazing bar is a strip of metal or wood that holds a panes of glass in place and separates the pane from adjacent panes. What is another term, used mostly in the USA, to describe a glazing bar?

From Quiz What's in a Home?

Answer: Muntin

Muntins were a common window component before the Industrial Revolution, as it was much more cost effective to produce and replace small panes of glass as opposed to large single panes. Modern insulated windows often have a false muntin sandwiched between two large panes in order to simulate the look of older windows.

14. Which royal residence, built by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, was designed in the Scottish baronial style?

From Quiz Victorian Architecture

Answer: Balmoral Castle

Victoria and Albert visited Scotland when they were 23 years old and had Balmoral built 10 years later in 1856. Balmoral was designed by architect William Smith and amended by Albert; and Victoria continued with his plans after his death. Balmoral embodies the Scottish baronial revival. Balmoral was designed with a principal keep tower and large turreted country house attached. The original Scots baronial style was comprised of tall keep towers and turrets, but had thin walls. It became obsolete with the advent of gunpowder weapons, but was associated with chivalry and the nobility. Balmoral has continued to be the vacation residence of the Royal Family.

15. Canal houses were designed for two purposes: storing goods and for people to live in. Storing goods on the upper floors required pulleys, which are still a main element in canal houses. What use do these pulleys serve nowadays?

From Quiz Dutch Canal Houses

Answer: Moving furniture

Because of the narrow and steep stairs in canal houses, moving furniture is done by using the pulleys that were once used for hoisting grain, spices, linen and other goods. Cleaning windows is done by putting up a ladder, tram cables are attached either to the gable or poles, electrical cables are in the ground. Although there might be some pulley systems that are never used for moving furniture, they were never meant as a decorative aspect, nor are they viewed in that manner nowadays.

16. An international design competition was announced in 1955, inviting architects from all over the world to submit their vision for the planned Sydney Opera House. Whose design was ultimately the winner?

From Quiz The Sydney Opera House

Answer: Jørn Utzon from Denmark

Requirements for this design stated that it must include a hall large enough to seat 3,000 cultured bottoms, another to seat 1,200, and with suitably sized areas incorporated in each hall to accommodate opera or ballet productions, orchestral and vocal performance concerts, lecture theatre, and various large meetings. Entries by 233 architects representing 32 countries from all over the globe flooded in, but it would be Jørn Utzon from Denmark whose design was selected as the ultimate winner.

17. The Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize was previously known as the 'Building of the Year Award'. As the latter, the prize was awarded in 1994 to a railway station in London. Which one?

From Quiz A Very Stirling Affair

Answer: Waterloo International

Designed by Grimshaw Architects, Waterloo International was built to accommodate the Eurostar train service from London to Paris and Brussels via the Channel Tunnel. Eurostar offers a fast and convenient service which competes very well with the air service, if you take into account things like check-in times and having to find your way to Heathrow Airport. Following the move by Eurostar to St Pancras International in 2007, Waterloo International is being converted to domestic use.

18. What is a jib door?

From Quiz Key to the Door

Answer: Camouflaged hidden door in the walls of a room

A jib door was usually constructed so that it lay flush with the walls of the room from which it led, and was decorated in the same fashion as the rest of the walls in that room, so that, unless one knew the door was there, it was not obvious at all. Jib doors were often used in the old historic manor homes of England in particular, and more often than not as entrances to the rooms where servants worked behind the scenes. After all, if one is entertaining royalty at a great feast in the dining hall, it would be rather distracting to see flustered servants dashing to and fro in the background preparing dishes and organising wine and cutlery, old boy. Pip, pip, tallyho, for England and Saint George!

19. Which part of "Big Ben" is fourteen feet long?

From Quiz Takin' My Time

Answer: Minute hand

"Big Ben" clock tower is located in Westminster, London, England. This famous tourist attraction's clock dials are twenty-three feet square. The minute hand, on each clock face, is fourteen feet long. Each number is two feet high. "Big Ben" is actually the nickname for the bell of the clock in the north end of the Palace of Westminster. The name is sometimes incorrectly applied to the clock or tower. "Big Ben" was 150 years old in May, 2009.

20. What is another name for "Deconstructivism"?

From Quiz Deconstructivism

Answer: Deconstruction

The focus of Deconstructivism is on the form and the shape of the building, and many of the Deconstructivist buildings are built with similar materials.

21. What is the unflattering nickname which was immediately adopted for the CCTV media building in Beijing?

From Quiz Building Nicknames

Answer: hemorrhoid

The highly spatial building resembles a squatting human, and despite government efforts to rally public support for a name change, this effort has so far been unsuccessful.

22. "The architect should strive continually to simplify; the ensemble of the rooms should then be carefully considered, that comfort and utility may go hand in hand with beauty." What "organic" architect said this?

From Quiz "Quotable" Architecture

Answer: Frank Lloyd Wright

Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) was a leader of the Prairie School of architecture and advocated an "organic" style, typified by the Fallingwater house in Pennsylvania and the Guggenheim in New York. Quote source: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/f/frank_lloyd_wright.html

23. The style known as the 'True Style' (1750-1830) later came to be called __________ ?

From Quiz Random Architectural History

Answer: Neoclassicism

Excavations at the newly discovered cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum were part of the reason for the return to classical styles in architecture.

24. The Statue of Liberty

From Quiz Architectural Skeletons

Answer: Wrought Iron

Eiffel designed the wrought iron skeleton which is clad with copper per Bartholdi's design. Bartholdi's first idea was to make a hollow statue filled to the hips with sand. This wouldn't have worked since the outward thrust of the sand would have ripped the copper sheathing apart at the seams.

25. According to scholars, most ancient Greek temples were:

From Quiz Bits of Architecture

Answer: Painted brilliantly, with reds, blues and yellows, in a riot of color

To modern eyes, ancient Greek temples derive much of their grandeur from their simple lines, their disciplined elegance and the white austerity of their stones. But the Greeks saw them differently. Scholars now know that originally the temples were almost gaudy. Brilliant paints - blues, reds and yellows - were splashed on many of the stones and turned columns. Since the pigments were expensive, their lavish use was simply an ostentatious display of wealth. The temples' present whiteness is the result of time and the bleaching, paint-flaking power of the Mediterranean sun.

26. Where in a home would you be most likely to see a mullion?

From Quiz What's in a Home?

Answer: Between two or more adjacent windows

Mullions are vertical dividers, rarely more than six inches wide, that separate two or more adjacent windows. Originally designed as structural posts intended to reduce the span of lintels or headers, in modern architecture they are primarily used to create a visually pleasing separation.

27. Which London music venue was the world's first domed amphitheater?

From Quiz Victorian Architecture

Answer: Royal Albert Hall

Royal Albert Hall was the world's first domed amphitheater. It was opened in 1871 by Queen Victoria in memory of her late husband, Albert. It was built in the Italianate style of architecture, and was made of wrought iron and glass. It was originally designed for an 8000 person capacity, but due to modern safety regulations, its capacity is now 5544. At first, the acoustics were not good, as there was a reverberation of 11 seconds in some parts of the theater. Throughout the years, improvements were made, and finally, in 1969, large fiberglass acoustic diffusing discs were hung from the ceiling, which are still used today. Many improvements have been made in heating, ventilation, and sight lines. The Hall now hosts 390 performances in the main event space, annually, across all music genres, including community events.

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