
White House - An Architectural Delight in Washington DC
The White House of Washington Dc located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Northwest Washington, is the home of the president of America. It had a long history of its own. Today's elegant porticoes looked quite different two hundred years ago. The White House of America was built between the year 1792 and 1800 and since then it continued to be the home of every president of America elected by its people since John Adams. Today, the White House serves as an architectural delight in capital city of Washington DC.
The plan of this great architecturally beautiful edifice was developed by the famous engineer Pierre Charles L'Enfant. He worked with George Washington and designed the capital city of Washington and the present White House. James Hoban, Irish-born architect also played a great role in designing the White House in the Palladian style. The original edifice was constructed on a pale gray sandstone and had three floors with more than 100 rooms. The cornerstone was placed in the year 1792 and finished in 1800 costing about $232,372.
The original White House was much small in size and constant efforts were made to remodel it to make it architecturally beautiful. The present structure was first remodelled in 1801 under the presidency of Thomas Jefferson. Now it is a six story edifice having several wings, most of which were added to the original structure.
Know More about the Architecture of the White House at Wiki
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_House#Architectural_appraisal
Learn Little Facts Regarding the Architecture of the White House at About.com
http://architecture.about.com/od/housetours/ss/whitehouse.htm
The first Oval Office was added in 1910 under Taft administration and today it serves as the office of the president. The inner rooms of this elegant porticoes mansion were restructured at the time of Harry Truman's presidency, and this made the building structurally perfect.
The chief portico of the White House has three floors with eleven bays. You will notice lunette fanlight at the principal entrance of the portico. The sculpted swag is situated at the principal entrance. The balustrade parapet hides the main roofline. In the southern facade of the elegant mansion, you will find the architecture is made up of Palladian as well as neoclassical styles with three visible floors. The White House living quarters undergoes typical changes with every newly elected administration. The personal style is reflected through it with the addendum of private possessions of the new president.
Learn about the Architecture of White House at How Stuff Works
http://adventure.howstuffworks.com/washington-dc-city-guide4.htm
Learn the History of the Construction of White House at Great Buildings
http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/The_White_House.html

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