![]() From the broadest concepts to the smallest details of his profession, the sign of Olmsted's hand is everywhere in our lives. Olmsted's principles of democratic expansion and public access still guide and inspire urban planners. Beyond the hundreds of parks enjoyed by millions of people, Olmsted and his firm set the standard for hospital and institutional grounds, campuses, zoos, railway stations, parkways, private estates, and residential subdivisions across the country. The informal natural setting he made popular characterizes the American Landscape. In what he created and what he preserved for the future, Olmsted's legacy is incalculable. His 1865 report on the park was the first systematic justification for public protection of natural areas, emphasizing the duty of a democratic society to ensure that the "body of the people" have access to natural beauty. With other reformers, he pushed for the protection of Yosemite Valley. Olmsted was a true renaissance man whose many interests and ceaseless flow of ideas led him into experimental farming, writing and publishing, public health administration, preservation, and urban and regional planning. Below right: carte-de-visite of Olmsted, 1893. Below: Employees of the Olmsted Brothers landscape design firm, at this point operated by his son, Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. He confronted a period of rapid mechanization and unabashed materialism with a natural sensibility and the old Jefferson virtues of restraint and rural simplicity, values still represented in his parks.Ībove: Plan of Riverside, one of Olmsted’s most celebrated suburbs, 1869. I have followed them through Modern Huntsman for several years now but hadn’t listened to the podcast until recently. Unable to separate his love and respect for the land from his belief in democracy, Olmsted saw parks as bastions of the democratic ideals of community and equality. Byron and Darryl are doing extraordinary work. His intuitive understanding of the historical changes he was living through and his rare combination of idealism, artistry, intelligence, and practical knowledge enabled him to help soften the shocks of industrialization. Olmsted and others saw the need for preserving green and open spaces where people could escape city pressures, places that nourished body and spirit. City life became more stressful as the crowds grew, the pace quickened, and the countryside was pushed into the distance. ![]() America was experiencing unprecedented growth in the mid-19th century, making the transition from a rural people to a complex urban society. Olmsted's unique contributions stemmed in part from the conjunction of strongly felt personal values and the needs of a young nation. Out of his deep love for the land and his social commitment he fathered the profession of landscape architecture in America. He is best known as the creator of major urban parks, but across the nation, from the green spaces that help define our towns and cities, to suburban life, to protected wilderness areas, he left the imprint of his fertile mind and boundless energy. Perhaps more than any other person, Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) affected the way America looks.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |