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Set atop a grassy rise, the Commonwealth Club has long been a bastion of social tradition in Richmond. Its clubhouse, however, is a surprisingly inventive piece of architecture that shows off Beaux-Arts design at its best by combining Italian and French Renaissance and colonial American elements to create a totally fresh design. The central two-story block, which contains a Palladian arch on the first floor, is topped by a triple-arched loggia on the second floor. At first glance, the two flanking wings appear to be symmetrical, but the roof treatments differ radically. A two-tiered side porch on the east end provides a wonderful transitional zone between the building and its grounds.