GARDENS TO VISIT
Here are important
gardens to visit. Some of them are historical and some of them have great
designs. We have selected all of the most prestigious ones.
If you have visited a
garden that is worthwhile seeing, please do not hesitate to contact us @
gardensources@LandscapeAcademy.com
and the garden source committee will review your selection and will be
happy to post it upon approval. Private gardens are welcome to join in our
Garden Sources listing.
ENROLL WITH THE LANDSCAPE ACADEMY TO BECOME A
PROFESSIONAL GARDEN DESIGNER.
United
States
Allerton Gardens South Coast tropical
Botanical Research Station Kauai This garden is a stunning example of what
unlimited money can accomplish given the time, the inclination, and a
magnificent setting. Bromeliads are used as bedding plants and the koi
come to a handclap.
Arnold
Arboretum
Harvard University Cambridge, MA
Callaway
Gardens
U.S. Highway 27 Pine Mountain, GA (800) 282-8181 An
extraordinary collection of native rhododendrons and azaleas as well as
thousands of hybrids, many developed here by Fred Galle, about 2,500 acres
worth.
Descanso
Gardens
Flintridge/ La Canada, CA A major camellia collection amid
century-old oaks.
Dumbarton
Oaks 31st and R Streets Washington, DC The best
Beatrix Farrand garden in America, and arguably the finest garden on the
continent. An Italian Renaissance garden by the only female founding
member of the American Society of Landscape Architects.
Filoli Canada Road Woodside,
CA (415) 366-4640 Sixteen acres of formal display gardens with a
series of 'garden rooms', including the Chartres window garden and a
sunken garden, among others. Formerly a private estate, Filoli is now open
to the public.
Foster
Botanic Garden
Honolulu, Hawaii Tropical trees and lots of bromeliads and
orchids.
Longwood
Gardens
Route One South Kennett Square, PA (215) 388-6741 Over
1,000 acres of display gardens, 30 miles outside Philadelphia, reflecting
the influence of both the French formal tradition and the English parkland
tradition.
Middletown Place
Charleston, SC A magnificently romantic
American garden begun in 1741. Off the Ashley River Road on the Ashley
River a half-hour from Charleston's Historic District.
Strybing
Arboretum
Golden Gate Park San Francisco, CA (415)
661-1316 Excellent Mediterranean-climate collection and California
native plant collection. Golden Gate Park also has a very good Japanese
tea garden across the street from the arboretum, and a lovely
conservatory.
The
United States National Arboretum
3501 New York Avenue N.E. Washington,
DC (202) 475-4859 A vast collection of trees and shrubs on 444
acres; in the spring 60000 azaleas bloom. Superb bonsai collection with a
number of specimens more than a century old.
Canada
Allen Gardens
Toronto, Ontario Greenhouses
in the heart of town are featuring cacti and succulents, orchids, and
aquatic plants.
Bagatelle
1635
Chemin St. Louis Sillery, Quebec A charming small estate garden just
outside the city limits of Quebec City.
Bois de Coulogne
Quebec City, Quebec Large collection of exotic
plants.
Devonian Gardens
Calgary, Alberta An indoor/ outdoor garden in an urban is
setting complete with multi-story office buildings.
Dr.
Sun Yat-Sen Garden
578
Carrall Street Vancouver, BC. (604) 662-3207 A Chinese garden
located in Vancouver's Chinatown.
Halifax Public Garden Halifax, Nova
Scotia
Jardin Van Den Hend
St. Foy, Quebec (418) 656-3410 Botanical garden with
plants grouped according to their botanical classification, a sort of
botanic family affair.
Minter Gardens
52892 Bunker Road Rosedale, BC. (604)
794-7191
Montreal
Botanical Garden Montreal, Quebec (514) 872-2429 The
largest botanical garden on the North American continent, third largest in
the world after Berlin in Germany and Kew in England.
Muttart Conservatory
Edmonton, Alberta Pyramidal glasshouses each were
representing a particular climate zone.
Nitobe Memorial Garden
University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC. (604)
228-4208 An especially fine Japanese garden with pretty little lakes
and streams, maples, azaleas, and Japanese iris.
The
Bloedel Conservatory
Queen Elizabeth Park Vancouver, BC.
Van
Dusen Botanical Garden
37th Avenue and Oak Street Vancouver,
BC. (604) 266-7194.
England
Blenheim Palace
Oxfordshire, England The vast English
park in all its glory. Some people think Lancelot "Capability" Brown
ruined Blenheim when he turned the parterres into lawns and flooded
Vanbrugh's bridge to well above its knees.
Hidcote Manor
Gloucestershire, England A simply lovely
place.
Leeds Castle
Kent,
England Another piece of pure loveliness.
Magdalene College
Oxford University Oxfordshire, England Humphrey Repton
laid out this garden in 1801. As long as you're at Oxford, don't miss the
university botanical garden along the Thames.
Sheffield Park
Sussex, England Lancelot "Capability" Brown (in 1776) and
Humphrey Repton (in 1789) both left their mark on this garden, which was
partially relandscaped by Arthur G. Soames in 1920. Superb
shrubs.
Syon House
Middlesex, England Another garden by "Capability"
Brown.
Tintinhull house
Somerset, England
The
Royal Horticultural Society's
Garden at Wisley Surrey, England A wonderful garden, but
the restaurant serves mediocre food. East first,
and wear comfortable walking shoes.
White Lodge
Richmond Park Surrey, England This is the tube stop just
before Kew coming from London; park signs request that you not pet the
deer during rutting season. William Kent is believed to have laid out the
gardens at white Lodge between 1731and 1735, and Humphrey Repton worked on
it in 1805.
There are
13000 gardens open-to-view in England, not counting those in Scotland,
Wales, and Ireland. These are but a sampling.
Ireland
Mount
Stewart Northern Ireland
Scotland
The Royal Botanic
Garden Edinburgh, Scotland A Reginald Farrar rocks
garden, extraordinary hedges, and wondrous peonies.
Spain
The Generalife
Grenada, Spain The ultimate Moorish garden with cabbage rose blooms
so big a child's face is completely obscured in bending to smell the
roses.
The
royal Botanic Garden Madrid, Spain.
France
Giverny, France
French Impressionist Claude Monet's home and garden now restored to
its original glory. The proper name of the house is Le Pressoir, but it is
better known by the name of the town where it is located. This is a day
trip from Paris, and not to be missed.
La
Malmaison Versailles, France This
is where Napoleon's Josephine planted all those roses painted by Redoute.
The palace at Versailles with the Grand Trianon and the Petit Trianon is
nearby with its classic French formal gardens.
Fontainbleau, France
Napoleon's favorite residence, complete with a 42,000-acre
forest, fountains, and flowers.
Les
Jardins Des Plantes
Paris, France A centuries-old botanical
garden.
Tuileries Gardens
Rue de Rivoli Paris, France The true home of all French
babies, their perambulators, and their heavily starched nannies. They
bloom all year-round.
Luxembourg
Gardens Left Bank (Rive Gauche) Paris,
France.
Italy
Boboli Gardens
Palazzo Pitti Florence, Tuscany
Villa Medici Accademia Della Crusca Castello,
Tuscany Begun in 1538 and much altered in the eighteenth century, the
Villa Medici now houses the Accademia Della Crusco, a famous language
institute. The garden has an extraordinary orangerie, some 600 terra cotta
pots of citrus trees, a system of fountains and watercourses, and a
magnificent grotto.
Villa Gamberaia
Tuscany
Japan
Katsura Imperial
Villa Katsura shimizicho Ukyo-Ku, Kyoto An
outstanding example of a Japanese stroll garden laid out in the
seventeenth century. Don't miss it. Apply for a pass at the Kyoto Imperial
Household Agency; you will need your passport to pick up the pass the day
before you visit. The same agency also handles passes for the gardens of
the Sento Palace and Shugakuin Imperial Villa, which are well worth
seeing.
Ryoanji Temple
Goryonoshitacho, Ryoanji, Ukyo-Ku, Kyoto A
fifteenth-century temple garden that features the world's most famous sand
garden.
Saihoji
Kamigayacho, Matsuo, Ukyo-Ku, Kyoto An extraordinarily beautiful
stroll garden covered with moss created in 1339 by the Zen Buddhist priest
Muso-Kokushi (1275-1351). Open by appointment only. Send a letter
requesting permission at least five days in advance and include a reply
card. The letter must state the date you wish to visit, your name,
address, age, occupation, and nationality.
Koishikawa Korakuen Garden
Koraku Bunkyo-Ku, Tokyo A seventeenth-century stroll
garden showing some Chinese influence in its design.
Kiyosumi Garden
Kiyosumi Koto-Ku, Tokyo A nineteenth-century stroll
garden famous for the rocks collected from all over
Japan.
Rikugien Garden
Honkomagome Bunkyo-Ku, Tokyo An eighteenth century stroll
garden featuring a small lake with an island and a wooded
hill.
Australia
The Botanic
Gardens of Adelaide Veale Garden on South Terrace
Himeji Japanese Garden on South Terrace The Botanical Garden on
North terrace Southern Australia Sixteen hectares of landscape grounds,
including a conservatory, featuring native and exotic plants in the
botanical garden; the other gardens are on separate grounds. All are
located in the Parklands, a green belt that encircles the city of
Adelaide. Wear comfortable walking shoes; this is less a garden stroll
than a trek.
The
Botanic garden
The
Domain Hobart, Tasmania Established in 1818, this garden has an
interesting collection of both native and exotic plants.
The Royal Botanic Garden Domain
Road next to king's Domain Melbourne A superb collection of Australian
native plants, as well as exotics like azaleas.
Fitzroy Gardens
Spring Street at Wellington Parade Melbourne Captain Cook's
stone cottage was brought from England and re-erected here to honor the
first Englishman to lay eyes on what is either the world's largest island
or the world's smallest continent. There is a conservatory in addition to
the outdoor plantings.
King's Park
Central Perth West Australia Blanketed with native
wildflowers in September and October; essentially a wile garden on the
edge of Perth.
South
Africa
Kirstenbosch Botanical
Garden Capetown, South Africa The world's finest
collection of the extraordinary Cape flora as well as an excellent
collection of specimens from the Karoo. Not to be missed on any
account.
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