Bijou Theatre, MelbourneW
Bijou Theatre, Melbourne

The Victorian Academy of Music was a theatre in Bourke Street, Melbourne, built for Samuel Aarons in 1876. It was also advertised as the Bijou Theatre, as if to distinguish it from the larger Theatre Royal and Opera House, then in 1880 the "Academy" title was dropped. In June 1884 it was purchased for £47,000 by John Alfred Wilson, owner of nearby Academy of Music Hotel and Gaiety Theatre, all on Bourke Street.

Church of St. Luke, GloucesterW
Church of St. Luke, Gloucester

The Church of St. Luke, High Orchard, Gloucester, was a Church of England church built and endowed by the reverend Samuel Lysons, rector of Rodmarton, who was also the first minister.

Clifford's InnW
Clifford's Inn

Clifford's Inn is a former Inn of Chancery in London. It was located between Fetter Lane, Clifford's Inn Passage, leading off Fleet Street and Chancery Lane in the City of London. The Inn was founded in 1344 and refounded 15 June 1668. It was dissolved in 1903, and most of its original structure was demolished in 1934. It was both the first Inn of Chancery to be founded and the last to be demolished.

St. Nicholas Military CathedralW
St. Nicholas Military Cathedral

St. Nicholas Military Cathedral, popularly known as The Great Nicholas was one of the military cathedrals of the former Russian Empire. It was sited in the Kyiv Fortress overlooking the Dnieper River.

Raymond HotelW
Raymond Hotel

The Raymond Hotel was a hotel in South Pasadena, California, and first major resort hotel of the San Gabriel Valley. Largely a winter residence for wealthy Easterners, it was built by Mr. Walter Raymond of Raymond & Whitcomb Travel Agency of Boston, Massachusetts. The hotel was built atop Bacon Hill which lies between Pasadena and South Pasadena and was renamed Raymond Hill with the opening of the hotel in 1886. The original hotel, a grand and unequivocal Victorian edifice was burned to the ground in 1895. A second building, of a later and more fireproof style, was erected in 1901 and equally replaced the older in grandeur. The hotel was foreclosed following the Great Depression and was razed for commercial development.

Saint Sophia Church (Nakhchivan-on-Don)W
Saint Sophia Church (Nakhchivan-on-Don)

The Church of the Holy Wisdom of God or Saint Sophia Church ― was a Russian Orthodox church in Nakhchivan-on-Don Rostov Oblast, Russia.

Sukharev TowerW
Sukharev Tower

The Sukharev Tower was a Moscow landmark until its destruction by Soviet authorities in 1934. Tsar Peter I of Russia had the tower built in the Moscow baroque style at the intersection of the Garden Ring with Sretenka Street in 1692–1695.

Surrey TheatreW
Surrey Theatre

The Surrey Theatre, London began life in 1782 as the Royal Circus and Equestrian Philharmonic Academy, one of the many circuses that provided entertainment of both horsemanship and drama (hippodrama). It stood in Blackfriars Road, near the junction with Westminster Bridge Road, just south of the River Thames in what is now the London Borough of Southwark.