Vanderbilt houses

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From the late 1870s to the 1920s, the Vanderbilt family employed some of the country's best Beaux-Arts architects and decorators to build an unequalled string of New York townhouses and East Coast palaces in the United States. Many of the Vanderbilt houses are now National Historic Landmarks. Some photographs of Vanderbilt's residences in New York are included in the Photographic series of American Architecture by Albert Levy (1870s).

The list of architects employed by the Vanderbilts is a "who's who" of the New York-based firms that embodied the syncretic (often dismissed as "eclectic") styles of the American Renaissance: Richard Morris Hunt, George B. Post, McKim, Mead, and White, Charles B. Atwood, Carrère and Hastings, Warren and Wetmore, Horace Trumbauer, John Russell Pope, Addison Mizner were all employed by the descendants of Cornelius Vanderbilt, who built only very modestly himself.

Houses

Cornelius Vanberbilt II house, largest home ever in New York City.
"Petit Chateau", the William K. Vanderbilt mansion
The Vanderbilt Triple Palace on 5th Avenue
Elm Court, the Lenox cottage of Emily Thorn Vanderbilt Sloane
Rough Point, the Newport cottage of Frederick Vanderbilt

References

External links

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