Rajaji Hall was built in the form of a Greek temple and is believed to have been modelled after the Parthenon in Athens.
Initially the church was built in the form of a temple.
The house has the form of a Greek temple with six full height Corinthian columns supporting a heavy entablature and low flushboarded pediment.
The main part of the building is now in the form of a Classical temple, in a Corinthian style.
The building is in the form of a Greek Doric temple.
The original building on a rectangular plan is designed in the neoclassical style in the form of a temple with tall baroque-style clocktower.
The sarcophagus is constructed of Pentelic marble retaining traces of its polychromy, in the form of a Greek temple.
According to those plans, the church was to have been in the form of a Greek temple, a notion that was abandoned.
In 1829, an expiatory chapel was built there in the form of a temple.
Rarely did such culture come to the West Coast, and certainly not in the form of a Roman temple overlooking the Pacific Ocean.