Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Catalan Romanesque Churches of the Vall de Boí' has mentioned 'Brick' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
In Italy, Poland, much of Germany and parts of the Netherlands, brick is generally used.
Vaults of stone or brick took on several different forms and showed marked development during the period, evolving into the pointed ribbed arch characteristic of Gothic architecture.
This sort of arrangement is particularly noticeable on the towers of Italian churches, which are usually built of brick and may have no other ornament.
Blind arcading in brick in the Mozarabic style of Asturia and Leon on the apse of Castro de Avelxc3xa3s Monastery, a unique example in Portugal.
There are a number of Romanesque Revival churches, dating from as early as the 1830s and continuing into the 20th century where the massive and "brutal" quality of the Romanesque style was appreciated and designed in brick.
These buildings, generally of brick, frequently have flattened buttresses rising to wide arches at the upper levels after the manner of some Italian Romanesque facades.
This style was adapted to suit commercial buildings by opening the spaces between the arches into large windows, the brick walls becoming a shell to a building that was essentially of modern steel-frame construction, the architect Henry Hobson Richardson giving his name to the style, Richardsonian Romanesque.