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What’s Out There® Richmond Richmond, VA Dear What’s Out There Richmond Visitor, Welcome to What’s Out There Richmond, organized by The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF) with support from national and local partners. The materials in this guidebook will inform you about the history and design of this modern city at the Falls of the James River, a place referred to as “Non-such” by colonists to express its incomparability. Please keep and enjoy this guidebook for future explorations of Richmond’s diverse landscape heritage. In 2013, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts, TCLF embarked upon What’s Out There Virginia, a survey of the Commonwealth’s landscape legacy, conceived to add more than 150 significant sites to the What’s Out There online database. As the program matured and our research broadened, TCLF developed What’s Out There Weekend Richmond, the tenth in an ongoing series of city- and regionally-focused tour Photo by Meg Eastman, courtesy Virginia Historical Society events that increase the public visibility of designed landscapes, their designers, and patrons. The two-day event held in October 2014 provided residents and tourists free, expert-led tours of the nearly thirty sites included in this guidebook and are the result of exhaustive, collaborative research. The meandering James River has, through the ages, been the organizing landscape feature of Richmond’s development, providing power to drive industry along with a navigable tidal section and canal network for transportation. The city became the governmental seat for the Confederacy and, following the Civil War and the period of Reconstruction, benefitted from the City Beautiful movement, which promoted symmetry, balance, grandeur, and monumentality. Today, Colonial Revival and Modernist styles are apparent amidst Richmond’s picturesque landscape, providing the design framework for parks, college campuses, civic squares, boulevards, suburbs, and cultural institutions. What’s Out There Richmond dovetails with the Web-based What’s Out There, the nation’s most comprehensive searchable database of historic designed landscapes. The database currently features more than 1,700 sites, 10,000 images, and 900 designer profiles. In 2013What’s Out There was optimized for The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF) iPhones and similar handheld devices, and now includes What’s Nearby, a GPS-enabled function that locates TCLF provides the tools to see, understand and value landscape architecture and all landscapes in the database within a 25-mile radius of any given location. its practitioners in the way many people have learned to do with buildings and On behalf of The Cultural Landscape Foundation, I thank you for your interest in What’s Out There Richmond their designers. Through its Web site, lectures, outreach and publishing, TCLF and hope you enjoy touring these unique sites. broadens the support and understanding for cultural landscapes nationwide to help safeguard our priceless heritage for future generations. Sincerely, learn more at tclf.org Charles A. Birnbaum, FASLA, FAAR PRESIDENT AND FOUNDER, THE CULTURAL LANDSCAPE FOUNDATION 2 The Cultural Landscape Foundation www.tclf.org 3 77˚40'0"W 77˚30'0"W 77˚20'0"W N e Rd w ll Mi A s N 95 h u d c c R k a o k d l e s n R a R d Broad Stree l h d t Rd s A d M ley R 271 o Stud 37˚40'0"N u 250 nta 295 in R 64 d G At re lee Sp en S R w t u S o at W ring ta r Bro o io a ad p d l S n P t l e R R f d o 37˚40'0"N wn Rd d i s R e d i o M d R n l t d t is i e l R R c l n y d n R T d d rla a d e u R r b c x F am k o Hungary R h a C d C h o e W B C road St Atl r 2 ee e Rd R e am d k E P arh en R ar E P Gre d ham Rd le Po Ch P u u rc B h m R r p d o W o R d 157 o k d 73 R o nson Rd R ki d Wil s m d n Ri i a dg k n ef s d e iel 627 k d a R Tp Pk R 301 e y ll G d •• vi d s n ic R an o h t c r d m R e e a e M b h g r d id L m a rd R r a e P llia b u Hi w de P o Focus on Colonial Revival style R N 356 d i rd a ve a e r 288 le Quioccasin 1 M Rd D Rd Developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries coincidentd with the W r r 360 R D ve e ro Thre sid 33 popularization of the landscape architecture and historict G preservation Patterson e C en 64 Dumbarton Rd lnu Ave hop l Wa t R G Azalea Ave d •• professions, this uniquely American design style reflects a nationalistic 6 awareness, appreciation,d and pride. Building upon the success of the H Cold Harbor R e r R m id W Broad St 1876 Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, popular interest in American Photo courtesy Agecroft Hall i g t e a 360 g R Chamberlayne d e history flourished. Coupled with industrialization, a nostalgic return to •• R d simpler times resulted in the development of the Colonial Revival. Found E Laburnum 197 A 156 Ri v primarily in the eastern states and replicating idealized and romanticized ver ve e Rd A ie forms and materials, the style was popularized by landscape architects b Ave H b 250 u i gu L e •• Tpke including Arthur Shurcliff, Ralph Griswold,295 Alden Hopkins, Ellen Shipman, no t T r Charles Gillette, and Morley Jeffers Williams. The Colonial Revival style is a Ave Agecroft Hall il R (4.5 miles) ⓯ Ca N d d ry found in public parks,R institutional grounds, and residential designs. 147 S L on t a ght R b rei d 95 Mechanicsville ur C •• Malvern N Boulevard n e u Often based on Dutch and British examples, compact, well-ordered, •• v m trees, often organized to frame significant views. Pergolas, arbors, A ⓲ t A ⓳ s v symmetrical gardens of perennial plants, herbs, and flowering trees 1 e fountains, sundials, stone walls, precisely-laid brick walkways, and •• are located in close proximity to homes. Blending formal elements ⓴ •• clipped boxwood hedges are popular elements found in Colonial Revival py ⓮ •• x W including parterres, allées, and cruciform plans with informal kitchen E Ma ⓬ gardens. Rusticated materials and antique elements provide a sense of ippen e in h h n S gardens, the style is both organized and relaxed. Geometric beds often C am i 146 t l R Pk t ➒ d ob y l ⓭ ile R 33 permanence and heritage. Among the most popular styles of the 20th io e St e M r 156 u B s th areNin enclosed by low walls and accessed by axial paths.rt D Highly detailed R 195 ➐ 7 po d ir century, the historicist appeal of Colonial Revival design endures today. N ➓ A ➊ planting plans create year-round interestE and verticalN dimensionality by 683 S N ➎ L in ⓫ St employinga low-maintenance ground cover, flowering shrubs, and canopy Colonial Revival sites Eastbourne Lake e F th b ores ve ➑ 5 u M • t Hill A 2 r ➏ n il ⓱ N e 711 ➋ u m R 161 d •• 64 A v J r ames ver e Ri ⓰ D W t o Lake Salisbury List of sites r r l d ➍ po r Rd ke ➌ i W hn R e r a d v A J A C a Ai BYRD PARK FAN DISTRICT NORTHSIDE es o S r 678 m n m I em I 675 o S m E V B 686 burg Rd e courtesy Will Reiley and Associates Photo by Roger Foley, s ➊ W ⓬ Alleys and Parks of the Fan •• Joseph Bryan Park e Byrd Park ill ld r iam iam t c ill sb e O e W 60 urg r R Hull St R d a ⓭ Monroe Park d •• n ➋ Maymont Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden s M 60 156 pke e ⓮ Monument Avenue e Midlothian T an Tpk m i Midloth d SHOCKOE BOTTOM o E urg R 37˚30'0"N CHURCH HILL W msb E r A illia i l a 360 lm k l 5 o •• Poe Museum's Enchanted Garden H o n FAR WEST END d ➌ Chimborazo Park R O w C d W re d l y a ek R d 76 rwick Rd on H ➍ Libby Hill Park ⓯ Tuckahoe Plantation u d n idge R WEST END d N Woolr R Herm r ea 150 37˚30'0"N t e ms M d R JAMES RIVER •• d Altria Headquarters R Commerce Rd DOWNTOWN d C Tu d h ⓰ James River Park System •• University of Richmond r lv ar ne B ➎ Capitol Square le r s k C ⓱ R Historic Tredegar c e i o ty d ➏ v R HollywoodA Cemetery R d WINDSOR FARMS d um Ln a rn s o ➐ Kent-Valentine House r u c k b NEAR WEST END •• Agecroft Hall Lu B La S H ley Blvd S w ic lms ➑ Kanawha Plaza ⓲ Virginia Historical Society if k Wa •• Virginia House t s C 288 R 647 d y re Bells R k T e y d ➒ Jackson P Ward u k Powhite Pk Ch as ⓳ Virginia Museum of Fine Arts •• Reveille House, United Methodist Church rk k ip nt ey Cree pe ho nh ➓ca White House of the Confederacy ⓴ Rice House and Garth Fa a Po Powhite Pky llin Hull St Rd m g C P J 895 r k e ⓫ Virginia War Memorial •• Wilton House Museum •• Windsor Farms e y f f e e k 4 The Cultural Landscape Foundation r www.tclf.org 5 so d n R Ot o terd nit Kent-Valentine House D al Ge a e B v ranch is 604 H Je 637 w ssup R y Ne d d w M 295 R Mill Rd ark e e O t d Swift Creek g Rd d s R i e r b l o a Reservoir B d 653 ys 651 rn r b 10 H e e w o tt e p T O S N k pk t i ns r a e t d h R d d R e R R R l d 301 idg il oolr d W nt b d g o R o 95 m h l C 1 rc e u C B h l C a s y li t Cre p il if ek o w i ingsla W S n K nd Rd t World Wa R r II Vete Defense d rans Mem orial Hwy d Supply Center 360 ah R Beul 604 Kingslan Rd d Rd 5 d e k R ourthou g Rd e ge C se id 156 ll St re rid Rd r 613 u B B d H C y d y le n R r i R a ro D B a I er ra l t nch l s B y a e u d h e Q 288 C e d R R k oc p r e t n i Sprin d 145 eac g Ru R B h R W n d Rd ird Branch C alia Th entr Beach Rd h 144 655 anc 655 Crooked Br 746 77˚40'0"W 77˚30'0"W 77˚20'0"W 021 4 Miles 021 4 KM Byrd Park 600 South Blvd, Richmond 600 South Blvd, Richmond Byrd Park Byrd Park Photo by Scott Breakall and Max Myers Addressing Richmond’s growing need for a safe water supply, engineer Wilfred Cutshaw developed the 60-acre New Reservoir Park in 1874 surrounding an elevated lake.
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