Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'Smithsonian Gardens'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • Actualités
    • Members and Guests Please Read This
  • Restaurants, Tourism, and Hotels - USA
    • Washington DC Restaurants and Dining
    • Philadelphia Restaurants and Dining
    • New York City Restaurants and Dining
    • Los Angeles Restaurants and Dining
    • San Francisco Restaurants and Dining
    • Houston Restaurants and Dining
    • Baltimore and Annapolis Restaurants and Dining
  • Restaurants, Tourism, and Hotels - International
    • London Restaurants and Dining
    • Paris Restaurants and Dining
  • Shopping and News, Cooking and Booze, Parties and Fun, Travel and Sun
    • Shopping and Cooking
    • News and Media
    • Fine Arts And Their Variants
    • Events and Gatherings
    • Beer, Wine, and Cocktails
    • The Intrepid Traveler
  • Marketplace
    • Professionals and Businesses
    • Catering and Special Events
    • Jobs and Employment

Calendars

There are no results to display.

Categories

  • Los Angeles
    • Northridge
    • Westside
    • Sawtelle
    • Beverly Grove
    • West Hollywood
    • Hancock Park
    • Hollywood
    • Mid
    • Koreatown
    • Los Feliz
    • Silver Lake
    • Westlake
    • Echo Park
    • Downtown
    • Southwest (Convention Center, Staples Center, L.A. Live Complex)
    • Financial District
    • Little Tokyo
    • Arts District
    • Chinatown
    • Venice
    • LAX
    • Southeast Los Angeles
    • Watts
    • Glendale
    • Pasadena
    • Century City
    • Beverly Hills
    • San Gabriel
    • Temple City
    • Santa Monica
    • Culver City
    • Manhattan Beach
    • Thousand Oaks
    • Anaheim
    • Riverside
    • Palm Springs
    • Barbecue
    • Breakfast
    • Chinese
    • Cuban
    • Diners
    • Food Trucks
    • Hamburgers
    • Korean
    • Mexican (and Tex
    • Taiwanese
    • Thai

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Joined

  • Start

    End


Group


Skype


AIM


Jabber


Yahoo


ICQ


Website URL


MSN


Interests


Location

Found 3 results

  1. Of course DC has lots of interesting and beautiful gardens, but many people don't think of visiting the Smithsonian as part of their garden tours. The gardens and landscaping there are wonderful; there's always something new blooming in them (in season, of course). Here's a primer, starting with the National Museum of Natural History and moving counter-clockwise around the Mall. The long, narrow space between the east side of NMNH and 9th St holds the Butterfly Habitat Garden, planted mostly with native forbs, grasses, shrubs, and trees (plus a few exotics) to demonstrate how homeowners can attract butterflies to their home gardens. On the south side, west of the Madison Drive entrance, and continuing around the west side and partway along the north side, is the Urban Bird habitat, also a mix of native and exotic plantings. Across 12th St. at National Museum of American History is the Victory Garden, planted with vegetable varieties that were available to Americans planing their victory gardens during WWII. The walled beds that encircle the museum are home to the Heirloom Garden, planted almost exclusively with heirloom cultivars of ornamentals. On the south side are some lovely crabapples (done blooming already, alas) and wisteria along the walls. Across the mall at the Freer (now closed for renovations [Jan 4, 2016 - Sometime in 2017]) is a small decorative garden in front and a delightful courtyard planted with Japanese maples. I'm not sure what will be there when the museum reopens in 2017. Next to this is the big one: the Enid A. Haupt Garden, bounded by the Freer, the Castle on the Mall side, the Arts and Industries Building to the east, and on the south by the Renwick Gates at Independence Ave. The centerpiece of the Haupt Garden is the formal parterre (currently planted with blue pansies and purple tulips), lined on either side with magnificent saucer magnolias. The area to the west, bounded by the entrance kiosks to the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and the S. Dillon Ripley Center, holds the Moongate Garden, with lovely pink granite hardscaping and a reflecting pool. It's a tranquil space, with only a few well-chosen woody plants and a few grasses. It's a good example of how a garden doesn't have to be entirely about plants. The area to the east of the parterre is called the Fountain Garden, and features more hardscaping and container plantings than in-ground plantings. Proceeding east from the Haupt on the north side, you'll find the Kathrine Dulin Folger Rose Garden, which is about to be renovated. Continuing east then heading south on the other side of Arts and Industries is the polar opposite of the Moongate Garden: the Mary Livingston Ripley Garden is full of antique benches, a fountain, lamposts, and a crazy variety of flowering and non-flowering plants. Really crazy: there must be several hundred different cultivars in there. East of the Ripley Garden is the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, which is much more about the sculptures than the plants, but still a lovely, relaxing space. The actual sculpture garden is across Jefferson Drive from the Hirshhorn building. To the east of that is the Rodney Dangerfield of Smithsonian Gardens: the National Air and Space Museum. Next time you're there, take a walk all 'round the building, on both the sidewalk level and across the expansive terraces. The landscaping is gorgeous. As far as I know it doesn't have a theme like some of the others, but the combination of woody ornamentals with perennial and ever-changing annual forbs is magnificent, especially on the east side. Then there's the National Museum of the American Indian. Currently the north side is closed for construction, but along the south you'll find beds filled with plants that had specific uses for native American peoples. There's a small pond on the south east side, and a much larger pond on the east side. The area around the pond is planted mostly with native trees, shrubs, and forbs, suggesting an eastern US woodland. Also part of Smithsonian Gardens is a magnificent flower arrangement in the entry to the Sackler Museum, created and changed almost weekly by the incredibly talented Cheyenne Kim. And in NMAH there are cases with displays from the Smithsonian orchid collection. Off the Mall is the Kogod Courtyard (inside the National Portrait Gallery and the Smithsonian American Art Museum). The plantings in the beds change seasonally. Over the holidays they held poinsettias and phalaenopsis orchids, which gave way in spring to hydrangeas and now have azaleas. Now is a great time of year to visit. And on May 6 SG is holding Garden Fest. Say hi if you stop by.
  2. Every year for at least twenty years now Smithsonian Gardens and the US Botanic Garden have teamed up to do an exhibition of orchids from their spectacular collections. The 2017 exhibition will be held at the Hirshhorn Gallery. It opens January 14 and runs through May 14. My understanding is that this is going to be more art show than science exhibit; I know that SG staff are really excited about it. The displays will be changing frequently: as plants finish blooming, they'll be replaced with new ones. Be aware that crowds are expected for the Yayoi Kusama exhibit starting in late February. I'm told that the lines for that shouldn't interfere with viewing Orchids: A Moment, but don't be surprised. Better yet, get your free timed entry tickets for the Kusama show so you can enjoy both.
  3. This post reminded me, when visiting the Sackler be sure to look at the floral displays by Cheyenne Kim (SI horticulturalist) in the entrance kiosk. The displays are funded by a grant and change every week or two. They are always spectacular works of art. Kim was also doing the ones at the Freer, which is now closed for renovations. Many visitors to the Smithsonian don't really notice or think about the gardens, but they are an integral part of the experience. Smithsonian Gardens is a "unit" of the Smithsonian Institution, and the people there create and maintain displays inside the museums as well as outside. There are plantings all around the American History museum, a butterfly garden, a bird garden, the Victory Garden, the Mary Livingston Ripley Garden, the Enid A. Haupt Garden (and within that the fountain garden and the moongate garden), the rose garden (eek I've forgotten for whom it's named), extensive landscaping around Air and Space, and native plants at American Indian. Oh, and the Kogod Courtyard as well. Sometimes there is art displayed in the gardens, as in the Hirshhorn Sculpture Garden, or the new urn created by D.B. Renfroe in the Haupt Garden. The Ripley Garden features urns, benches, lampposts, and a fountain. And of course the gardens themselves are works of art. Even in the winter there are interesting things to see in the gardens. Check out the medallions on the iron fences on the north side of Haupt, or the birch bark decorations on the Renwick Gates.
×
×
  • Create New...