Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Palace and Park of Versailles' has mentioned 'Marble' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The two apartments were separated by a marble terrace, overlooking the garden, with a fountain in the center.
[33] The grand stairway to the King's apartment was redecorated almost as soon as it was completed with plaques of colored marble and trophies of arms, tapestries, and balconies, so the members of the court could observe the processions of the King.
In 1687 Hardouin-Mansart began the Grand Trianon, or Trianon de Marbre (Marble Trianon), replacing Le Vau's 1668 Trianon de Porcelaine in the northern section of the park.
The Marble Court and facades of the first Chateau, embellished by Louis Le Vau (1661xe2x80x9368) and then Hardouin-Mansart in (1679xe2x80x931681) Plan of the main floor (c. 1837, with north to the right), showing the Hall of Mirrors in red, the Hall of Battles in green, the Royal Chapel in yellow, and the Royal Opera in blue Aerial view from the garden The facade facing the garden, with the royal apartments and the Gallery of Mirrors between them[citation needed]
Built of red brick and cut stone embellishments, the U-shaped layout surrounds a black-and-white marble courtyard.
In the center, a 3-storey avant-corps fronted with eight red marble columns supporting a gilded wrought-iron balcony is surmounted with a triangle of lead statuary surrounding a large clock, whose hands were stopped upon the death of Louis XIV.
The rest of the faxc3xa7ade is completed with columns, painted and gilded wrought-iron balconies and dozens of stone tables decorated with consoles holding marble busts of Roman emperors.
The wood was painted to resemble marble, and the ceiling was decorated with a painting of the Apollo, the god of the arts, preparing crowns for illustrious artists, by Louis Jean-Jacques Durameau.
[87] The four tiers are covered in 230 pieces of marble, composed of the white and grey-veined Cararra, greenish marble from Campan, and red marble from Languedoc.
The Latona Fountain underwent a major renovation between 2012 and 2015, which required the removal of its statuary, marble fittings, and lead pipe network for off-site restoration.
The marble facing and statues were covered in years of accumulated grime, obscuring the vibrant colors of the marble and the gilt fixtures as they originally appeared.
In 1687, he replaced it with the Grand Trianon, a larger and more classical pavilion designed by Mansart, with a terrace and walls faced with different colored slabs of marble.