Commercial buildings.

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

  • Use broadly to refer to buildings associated with any aspect of the various activities and business relationships of industry and trade; when referring to structures associated with the purchase, sale, or exchange of goods in business, use

Source note(s)

  • Art & Architecture Thesaurus

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Commercial buildings.

Equivalent terms

Commercial buildings.

Associated terms

Commercial buildings.

94 Archival description results for Commercial buildings.

94 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Alterations to Shop Front of Levesque and Rinfret (Stephen's Estate)

Retail store.
6 working drawings: floor plans, section
28 detail drawings: elevations, entrance, lettering, show window, plasterwork (including ceiling, cornice, wall panel, arch), fittings, woodwork (including fittings, veneer inlays, store window), windows, stairs, elevator, furniture, wiring outlets, balusters, partition, stained and leaded glass, newel post

Alterations to Store of Perrault Estate

Retail store.
2 measured drawings: floor plan, elevations, section
1 development drawing: floor plans
2 working drawings; floor plans, elevations, sections
11 detail drawings: plan, elevations, woodwork (including paneling, exterior work, pilasters, newel post), windows, doors, moulding, cornice, awning, balusters, newel, beam
5 consultant drawings: columns and beams schedule, plans
1 photograph: 1 finished exterior

Arab Monetary Fund Headquarters

File includes 2 drawings (1 site plan, 1 section) and 1 photograph slide of model. This project was a limited design competition. The twin towered headquarters building was commissioned for a major international financial organization. The design incorporates both mirrored double glazed curtain walls for offices, and reflective glass blocks and walls for the service core and major circulation spaces.

Beit Clal Conference Center

Moshe Safdie conceived the Beit Clal Conference Center as a building bridging the water. The site for the project was located in a naturally wooded area with a pond, formed from an existing stream in Pomona, New York. The overall complex was an "L-shape" with the north-south spine contoured along the pond's edge and the east-west spine spanning the pond as a bridge structure. The center was designed to serve as a "think-tank" - a meeting place for the exchange of knowledge in training and leadership for the Jewish community.

Safdie Architects

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