Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Historic Centre of the City of Salzburg' has mentioned 'Architecture' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 History 1.1 Antiquity to the High Middle Ages 1.2 Independence 1.3 Modern era 1.3.1 Religious conflict 1.3.2 Illuminism 1.4 Electorate of Salzburg 1.5 Austrian annexation of Salzburg 1.6 Salzburg under Bavarian rule 1.7 Division of Salzburg and annexation by Austria and Bavaria 1.8 20th century 1.8.1 First Republic 1.8.2 Annexation by the Third Reich 1.8.3 World War II 1.8.4 Present day 2 Geography 2.1 Climate 3 Population 4 Architecture 4.1 Romanesque and Gothic 4.2 Renaissance and baroque 4.3 Classical modernism and post-war modernism 4.4 Contemporary architecture 5 Districts 6 Main sights 7 Education 7.1 Universities and higher education institutions 8 Notable citizens 9 Events 10 Transport 11 Popular culture 12 Language 13 Sports 13.1 Football 13.2 Ice hockey 13.3 Other sports 14 International relations 14.1 Twin townsxe2x80x94sister cities 15 Gallery 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Bibliography 20 External links
Architecture[edit]
Nevertheless, some new structures have been added: the Mozarteum at the Baroque Mirabell Garden (Architecture Robert Rechenauer),[27] the 2001 Congress House (Architecture: Freemasons), the 2011 Unipark Nonntal (Architecture: Storch Ehlers Partners), the 2001 "Makartsteg" bridge (Architecture: HALLE1), and the "Residential and Studio House" of the architects Christine and Horst Lechner in the middle of Salzburg's old town (winner of the architecture award of Salzburg 2010).
[28][29] Other examples of contemporary architecture lie outside the old town: the Faculty of Science building (Universitxc3xa4t Salzburg xe2x80x93 Architecture Willhelm Holzbauer) built on the edge of free green space, the blob architecture of Red Bull Hangar-7 (Architecture: Volkmar Burgstaller[30]) at Salzburg Airport, home to Dietrich Mateschitz's Flying Bulls and the Europark Shopping Centre.
(Architecture: Massimiliano Fuksas)