|
|
|
Living in a |
Send our website to a friend! Attention Residential & Garden Architects ... If you are "unhappy" with the state of our professions these days, go here to read what we have to suggest. To help the Hurricane Victims, in Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, and other Gulf Coast areas, Go to any of these 80 Relief Organizations Here is what YOU can do about the Genocide taking place in Darfur and Chad! Have a nice cuppa tea or coffee while you are enjoying our site ![]() Sorry, but we are all out of crumpets! |
On the following three pages you will be treated to a fully annotated,
"slide show" presentation featuring some 50 (for now – more to come later!), screen-sized yet quick loading images all but two of
which were taken by us (Bill Hoppé) in the spring of 2001. We put this presentation together for several reasons
: We hope you will enjoy these pictures as much as Bill Hoppé enjoyed taking and readying them for the internet! Be sure to bookmark this page and pass it along to your family, friends, and all your acquaintances. When you have finished the tour, you might also want to visit Harvard's own Dumbarton Oaks website. To enjoy this tour to its fullest, make sure that your monitor display is set at 800x600 pixels. At that setting (as opposed to a setting of 1024x768 pixels), fully 95% of all the pictures will fill up your screen! With the exception of having to do some vertical scrolling, we promise you won't have to do any horizontal scrolling at all. Try it, you'll like it!
Here's Page 1 of our Tour...
(NOTE: Click on any thumbnail below and you are on the tour with its |
|
|
[01] Main Entrance – at the corner of 31st and R Streets in the Georgetown section of Washington, DC. The gates were designed by Beatrix Farrand and made from Swedish wrought iron by Samuel Yellin. |
|
|
[02] Aerial View of the property – (Courtesy of Harvard University) |
|
|
[03] Photo of Beatrix (Jones) Farrand – the designer of the Dumbarton Oaks Garden. (Courtesy of Harvard University) |
|
|
[04] Testimonial Plaque – placed in the balustrade surrounding the "Green Garden" in commemoration of Beatrix Farrand and her clients, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss. |
|
|
[05] Front Facade – of the residence which was built in the late 18th century in the Federalist style. |
|
|
[06] Front entrance – |
|
|
07] The spreading Katsura tree – The Katsura (Cercidephyllum japonica) stands to right of the garden's main gate and is a marvel of near horizontal branches that hug the ground! |
|
|
[08] Orangery entrance – The Orangery was built in 1810 as a free standing (greenhouse) structure to house the potted plants of the "Green Garden" during the winter months. |
|
|
[09] Orangery interior – A single fig vine (Ficus pumila) planted in the mid 1860s now covers all the interior walls and beams of the structure. |
|
|
[10] Orangery Terrace – An outdoor seating area which is part of, and overlooks, the "Green Garden" which was used for entertaining and festooned with many exotic potted plants. |
|
|
Page 2 - Images 11 - 30 Page 3 - Images 31 - 50
If, at the end of this tour, you would like to take another one ...
Click
here
|
||