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| 1770 |
| | 27-year-old Thomas Jefferson begins constructing a mansion on a hilltop in Charlottesville, calling it Monticello ('little mountain') | |
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| 1800 |
| | US president John Adams moves into the newly completed White House, named for its light grey limestone | |
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| 1881 |
| | The Chicago architects Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan set up a partnership | |
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| 1901 |
| | Frank Lloyd Wright designs low residential buildings, suitable for the plains around Chicago, and calls them Prairie Houses | |
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| 1904 |
| | US architect Louis Sullivan completes the Schlesinger & Meyer Store (later known as the Carson, Pirie & Scott Store) in Chicago | |
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| 1906 |
| | Frank Lloyd Wright builds a Unity Temple for the Unitarians in Oak Park, now a suburb of Chicago | |
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| 1911 |
| | Pennsylvania Station opens in New York, designed by McKim, Mead & White | |
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| 1911 |
| | Frank Lloyd Wright designs Taliesin, as his own home and studio, near Bear Run in Wisconsin | |
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| 1913 |
| | A new and spectacular Grand Central Station opens in New York, designed by Charles Reed and Alan Stern | |
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| 1913 |
| | The Woolworth Building opens in New York as the world's tallest skyscraper, a distinction it retains until 1930 | |
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