Convent of Santo Domingo (Valencia)

The building went through renovations and expansions during different periods in history, hence it is home to Renaissance, Neoclassical, Valencian Gothic and Baroque styles of architecture.

It also has its own access through the Renaissance cloister;[8] this entrance consists of a pointed portico with a double archivolt on paired columns with a tympanum of the arms of Alfonso V of Aragon.

[9] Highlights of this room are its façade which was built in Gothic and Renaissance style, the vaulted roof without ribs and a double helical staircase lacking a stone axis.

This room is accessed through a pointed arch decorated with openwork tracery similar to that of the large windows, divided by stylized mullions.

[13][14] The main façade of the convent building was constructed at the beginning of the 19th century, which was partially altered when it became assigned to the Captaincy General of Valencia in 1840 by a decree of Baldomero Espartero.

Triumphal Entry of Ferdinand VII into Valencia (1815) by Miguel Parra Abril depicts the façade on the right.