NeoRomanesque
Neo-Romanesque, also known as Romaneque Revival, is an architectural style that revived elements of Romanesque architecture from the 11th and 12th centuries. It emerged in the first half of the 19th century and remained popular into the early 20th century, part of the broader historicist currents of the period. The style was adopted across Europe and in the United States for a range of building types, notably churches, libraries, government structures, and railway stations.
Characteristic features of Neo-Romanesque include heavy masonry walls, thick piers, and rounded arches over entrances, windows,
Regional variations exist. In the United States, the style produced the so-called Richardsonian Romanesque, named for
Decline came with the rise of modernist and eclectic styles after World War I, though Neo-Romanesque influenced