basilica
/bəˈsɪləkə/
noun
A large oblong hall or building with double colonnades and a semicircular apse, used in ancient Rome as a court of law or for public assemblies.
Kent’s solution was to devise an original interior combining element from Vitruvius’s Egyptian Hall, the colonnaded basilicas of ancient Rome, and the frieze from the Temple of Fortuna Virilis in Rome.
