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      • Second Empire homes often had a simple box form, square or rectangular, and were highly symmetrical. Many examples exist in Washington, D.C. such as Cooke’s Row on Q Street NW in Georgetown. Other good examples are the Visitation School located on 35 th Street NW and the Folger’s offices on the 500 block of 8 th Street SE.
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    • Jackie Craven
    • Victorian Homes in the Second Empire Style. With tall mansard roofs and wrought iron cresting, Victorian Second Empire homes create a sense of height. But, despite its regal name, a Second Empire isn't always elaborate or lofty.
    • Second Empire and the Italianate Style. At first glance, you might mistake a Second Empire home for a Victorian Italianate. Both styles tend to be square in shape, and both can have U-shaped window crowns, decorative brackets, and single story porches.
    • History of the Second Empire Style. The term Second Empire refers to the empire that Louis Napoleon (Napoleon III) established in France during the mid-1800s.
    • Second Empire in the USA. Because it was based on a contemporary movement in Paris, Americans considered the Second Empire style more progressive than Greek Revival or Gothic Revival architecture.
  2. The European born and trained architect Detlef Lienau, who studied architecture in Paris and emigrated to the U.S. in 1848, is credited with designing the first Second Empire house in the US, the Hart M. Schiff house in New York City, built in 1850.

  3. Designed by architect Alfred B. Mullet and notorious for its rich embellishment, the OEB is perhaps our nation’s grandest example of the Second Empire style. Please view our portfolio to see Second Empire and other style homes the Wentworth team has remodeled in the Washington, DC, metro area.

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  4. The Second Empire style, with its ubiquitous mansard roofs and heavy ornament, remained the first choice of wealthy homebuilders and their architects because it was, in their eyes, not only thoroughly “modern,” but also fashionably flashy in what was a very flashy era indeed. A History of the Mansard Roof.

  5. Second Empire architecture refers to a distinctive architectural style prevalent during the mid-19th century, characterized by the use of Mansard roofs, dormer windows, and elaborate ornamentation. Originating in France during the Second French Empire, this style later influenced architectural trends globally.

  6. Second Empire style, also known as the Napoleon III style, is a highly eclectic style of architecture and decorative arts, which uses elements of many different historical styles, and also made innovative use of modern materials, such as iron frameworks and glass skylights.

  7. Second Empire style, architectural style that was dominant internationally during the second half of the 19th century. Developing from a tendency of architects of the second quarter of the 19th century to use architectural schemes drawn from the periods of the Italian Renaissance, Louis XIV, and Napoleon I to give dignity to public buildings ...

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