Beaux-Arts / Neoclassical
The American adaptation of French-led Beaux-Arts architectural movement provided the basis for much American architectural and landscape architectural design in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century during the American Country Place Era. This style emulated European Renaissance and Baroque landscapes, as well as the gardens of Islamic-era Spain. It endured into the Great Depression, falling out of favor before the 1940s. Linked together by formal geometry within an over-all landscape design, Beaux-Arts garden “rooms” were defined by linear allées and hedges, as well as by walls and neoclassical garden pavilions. Classical sculptures often served as focal points and lined the sides of long vistas. Fountains, water chains, oblong reflecting pools, and details such as arbors and seating relied upon symmetry, balance, and elegance of detail. However, forms and details often were selected or adapted from multiple eras (typically Arabic, Renaissance, and Baroque) and European traditions (usually Italian, French, or British), resulting in an eclectic mix of historical references. This grand and formal style was popular throughout the country for large estates, as well as in City Beautiful era urban design.
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The Breakers
Newport, RI -
South Park System
Chicago, IL -
Martin Luther King, Jr. Park
Buffalo, NY -
California Pacific International Exposition
San Diego, CA -
Nemours
Wilmington, DE -
Gwinn
Bratenahl, OH -
Civic Center Plaza - San Francisco
San Francisco, CA -
Civic Center Park - Denver
Denver, CO -
Sherman Park
Chicago, IL -
President’s Park
Washington, DC -
National Mall
Washington, DC -
Fuller Park
Chicago, IL -
De Witt Clinton Park
New York, NY -
U.S. Capitol Grounds
Washington, DC -
New York State Capitol
Albany, NY -
Nebraska State Capitol
Lincoln, NE