The church, dedicated to St. Peter, is a small structure with no pretention to architectural beauty, and almost entirely covered with ivy.
This was taken down in 1744, and from the materials remaining a small fabric was erected in its place, consisting of nave and apsed chancel, with no pretensions whatever to architectural beauty.
The Church, St. Margaret’s, is of no architectural beauty, being built of brick and sandstone.
The new public buildings, containing the National Library and the Museum, are gems of architectural beauty; so are some of the banks, and so is the Great Southern Railway Terminus, and so are many other public buildings.
Close at hand is the parish church, a structure with little pretence to architectural beauty.
This is a picture of architectural beauty, and, from its elevated position, commands a view of every part of the gardens, as well as most extensive prospects of the surrounding country.
The church has no pretensions to architectural beauty, being a mixture of brick and sandstone.
Few monuments in the world equal this Gothic structure in architectural beauty.
This imperial assemblage of buildings, with the broad court about which they stand, presents no claim whatever to architectural beauty, being exceedingly heavy and substantial.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "architectural beauty" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.