•
Akasaka Palace (1899–1909), Tokyo, Japan •
Alferaki Palace (1848),
Taganrog, Russia •
Ashton Memorial (1907–1909),
Lancaster, England •
Belfast City Hall (1898–1906), Belfast, Northern Ireland •
Bode Museum (1904), Berlin, Germany •
British Columbia Parliament Buildings (1893–1897),
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada •
Building of the Baku City Executive Power (1900~1904), Baku, Azerbaijan •
Burgtheater (1888), Vienna, Austria •
Cardiff City Hall (1897–1906), Cardiff, Wales •
Cathedral of Salta (1882),
Salta, Argentina •
Christiansborg Palace (1907–1928), Copenhagen, Denmark •
Church of St. Ignatius Loyola (1895–1900), New York City, United States •
Church of Saints Peter and Paul (1932–1939),
Athlone, Ireland •
Cluj-Napoca National Theatre (1904–1906),
Cluj-Napoca, Romania •
Dolmabahçe Palace (1843–1856), Istanbul, Turkey •
Durban City Hall,
Durban, South Africa •
The Elms Mansion (1899–1901),
Newport, Rhode Island, United States •
Gran Teatro de La Habana (1908–1915), Havana, Cuba •
House of the National Assembly of Serbia (1907–1936), Belgrade, Serbia •
Thomas Jefferson Building, Library of Congress (1873–1897), Washington, D.C., United States •
Näsilinna (also known as the Milavida Palace) (1898),
Tampere, Finland •
Royal Palace, Sofia, Bulgaria •
National Theatre (1899), Oslo, Norway •
Oceanographic Museum of Monaco (1910), Monaco •
Old Parliament Building (1930),
Colombo, Sri Lanka •
Ortaköy Mosque (1854–1856), Istanbul, Turkey •
Palais Garnier (also known as the Paris Opera) (1861–1875), Paris, France •
Port of Liverpool Building (1903–1907), Liverpool, England •
Rosecliff Mansion (1898–1902), Newport, Rhode Island, United States •
Royal Museum for Central Africa (1905–1909),
Tervuren, Belgium •
Semperoper (1878),
Dresden, Germany •
Sofia University rectorate (1924–1934), Sofia, Bulgaria •
St. Barbara's Church (1910),
Brooklyn, New York, United States •
St. John Cantius Church (1893–1898), Chicago, United States • Stefánia Palace (formerly named Park Club) (1893–1895), Budapest, Hungary •
Széchenyi thermal bath (1913), Budapest, Hungary •
Volkstheater (1889), Vienna, Austria • Wenckheim Palace (1886–1889), Budapest, Hungary •
Zachęta National Gallery of Art (1898–1900), Warsaw, Poland There are also number of post-modern buildings with a style that might be called "Baroque", for example the
Dancing House in Prague by
Vlado Milunić and
Frank Gehry, who have described it as "new Baroque". ==Baroque Revival architects==