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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Architectural

Architectural \Ar`chi*tec"tur*al\, a. Of or pertaining to the art of building; conformed to the rules of architecture. -- Ar`chi*tec"tur*al*ly, adv.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
architectural

1762; see architecture + -al (1). Related: Architecturally.

Wiktionary
architectural

a. Pertaining to architecture.

WordNet
architectural

adj. of or pertaining to the art and science of architecture; "architectural history"; "architectural design"

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "architectural".

Horyuji buildings, it is especially representative of the Buddhist architectural style of the Six Dynasties period.

This kind of architectural integration with the natural environment seems to have been particularly to the liking of the Japanese.

It consists of seven floors, all of which, both inside and out, have been fashioned to a wonderful architectural design.

Also frequently shown in these screens are Christian churches, constructed in the architectural style of Buddhist temple buildings.

Japan was the gradual adoption of Western building materials and architectural styles.

But because of the relatively low priority given by SCAP to the physical reconstruction of Japanese cities and the gap between any drawing up and implementation of large-scale architectural projects, the postwar building boom in Japan did not begin until the early 1950s.

To understand the directions then taken in building, it will be helpful to review briefly the general course of architectural development during the preceding century.

All of these qualities are perfectly represented in that most flawless of traditional Japanese architectural masterpieces, the Tokugawa-period Katsura Detached Palace in Kyoto.

But the old structure remains vivid in historical memory, not only for its intrinsic qualities as an architectural masterpiece but also as a direct statement to the Japanese by one of the most powerfully individualistic Western artists of the early twentieth century.

Wright and the promise of more independence and even innovation of approach inherent in the new sentiments of Japanese architects, the 1920s and 1930s witnessed a general continuation of the earlier reliance upon, and imitation of, Western architectural trends.

World War II the Japanese had been influenced chiefly by European architectural styles, after the war the main foreign influence was, probably unavoidably, American.

One of the leaders in this postwar renewal was Maekawa Kunio, a former student of Le Corbusier and his Cubist-inspired emphasis on geometric forms in architectural design.

Tange Kenzo, who began winning prizes in architectural competitions during the war and later was for a time associated with Maekawa.

Rome in order to find the inspiration for his early architectural works.

And so it seems reasonable to accept the tale not for its precise interpretation of art and architectural history but for its broad details: Filippo and Donatello probably did go to Rome around 1403 and they may have stayed as late as the summer of 1404.