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Nota de aplicación

Style characterized by horizontally-oriented low buildings of one or two stories, flat roofs with little or no overhang, broad blank surfaces, few openings, components divided by small modules, materials of plaster, wood, brick, and tile, and colors in the ranges of reddish brown to cream. The style developed in Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States, as a statutory unified building style that incorporated synthesized elements of Pueblo Revival, Territorial, Native American, and American western styles, based on the Santa Fe Governor's Palace, Native American pueblos, and Spanish villages of the upper Rio Grande valley.

Referencias bibliográficas

  1. Kelemen, Pál; Westheim, Paul, "Arte americano precolombino y arte colonial", en "Historia del arte universal N° 18", Ediciones Moretón, España, Bilbao, 1967, p. 180

Ubicación jerarquía

Tipo de término