Country Place Era Garden
Large residential properties designed with an obvious, sometimes ostentatious, expression of affluence. Characteristic design features include formal garden styles, such as allées, terraces, fountains, and garden sculpture. Designers worked in close partnership with clients to create extravagant gardens inspired by European and Asian precedents in order to lend a sense of tradition, age, and affluence to what, in many cases, was “new money.” Taking inspiration from European Beaux-Arts design styles, there was a return to symmetry and more formal geometries. Prominent designers included Charles Platt, Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., and Beatrix Farrand. Instigated in part by the vast fortunes industrialization created for the wealthy, for most this era ended abruptly with the onset of the Great Depression.
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Boscobel House and Gardens
Garrison, NY -
Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site Formal Garden
Hyde Park, NY -
Blithewood Garden
Red Hook, NY -
Welwyn Preserve
Glen Cove, NY -
Seminary of the Immaculate Conception
Lloyd Harbor, NY -
Oheka Castle
Huntington, NY -
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cold Spring Harbor, NY -
Bayard Cutting Arboretum State Park
Great River, NY -
Thornewood
Lakewood, WA -
Stoneleigh
Villanova, PA -
Elk Rock Garden at the Bishop’s Close
Portland, OR -
Bradley Olmsted Garden
Columbus, GA -
Waveny Park
New Canaan, CT -
McGinley Garden
Milton, MA -
Wethersfield Estate & Garden
Amenia, NY