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Central Park
The park was designed by the famous landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted and the architect Calvert Vaux.
Central Park
The park was designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted and architect Calvert Vaux, who went on to collaborate on Brooklyn's Prospect Park.
Fort Greene, Brooklyn
In 1864, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, by now famous for their design of Central Park, were contracted to design the park, and constructed what was described in 1884 as "one of the most central, delightful, and healthful places for recreation that any city can boast."
Riverside Park
Riverside Park, Milwaukee, Wisconsin - Urban park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
Montreal
The park, most of which is wooded, was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed New York's Central Park, and inaugurated in 1876.
Manhattan
The park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux.
Landmarks of Montreal
Mount Royal is Montreal's outstanding urban park, designed in 1876 by Frederick Law Olmsted, best known as the designer of New York's Central Park.
Lake Storm "Aphid"
It is estimated that the storm damaged as many as 90 percent of the city's trees, including many in the city's cherished parks and parkways, which were designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.
Washington Park (Chicago park)
Olmsted designed the park to have two broad boulevards cutting through it, making it part of Chicago's boulevard system.
Forest Park (St. Louis, Missouri)
A popular myth says that Frederick Law Olmsted designed the park, fair grounds and Washington University campus.
Veterans Memorial Bridge (Rochester, New York)
part of Seneca Park, one of three major parks in Rochester designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, is located in the shadow of the bridge
Thomas Cadwalader
Trenton's "central park" was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and named Cadwalader park.
Genesee Valley Park
Genesee Valley Park is among the many parks in New York state designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Louisville, Kentucky
Several of these parks were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed New York City's Central Park as well as parks, parkways, college campuses and public facilities in many U.S. locations.
South Buffalo, Buffalo, New York
Also within the area are two parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted .
Trenton, New Jersey
Cadwalader Park - city park designed by noted landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted[9].
Seneca Park
Seneca Park was the last park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in Louisville, Kentucky, United States.
Louisiana Purchase Exposition
A popular myth says that Frederick Law Olmsted, who died the year before the fair, designed the park and fair grounds.
Cazenovia Park-South Park System
The interconnected set of parkways and parks was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted as part of his parks plan for the city of Buffalo.
Highland Park, Rochester, New York
Highland Park is one of many parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Nehemiah Royce House
Frederick Law Olmsted (1822–1903) was an American journalist, landscape designer and father of American landscape architecture, famous for designing many well-known urban parks, including Central Park in New York City.
Prospect Park (Brooklyn)
The park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux after they completed Manhattan's Central Park.
Washington Park
Washington Park (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) - Urban park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
Mount Royal
The park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed New York's Central Park, and inaugurated in 1876, although not completed to his design.
Conrad Weiser Homestead
The site includes period buildings and an orientation exhibit on a 26-acre (110,000 m2) landscaped park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Shawnee Park
It was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed 18 of the city's 123 public parks.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Park
Located in east Buffalo and bisected by Fillmore Avenue, it is an individual park designed in 1874 by Frederick Law Olmsted and originally connected to Delaware Park via the Humboldt Parkway.
Watertown (city), New York
It is the smallest city to have a park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the celebrated landscape architect who created Central Park in New York City.
Lake Park
Lake Park, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, urban park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
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United States Sanitary Commission
According to the Wall Street Journal, "Its first executive secretary was Frederick Law Olmsted, the famed landscape architect who designed New York's Central Park."
University of North Alabama
UNA's initial campus facilities master plan was developed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the same architectural firm that designed New York City's Central Park.
Wheatleigh
Frederick Law Olmsted, who famously designed New York's Central Park, designed Wheatleigh's surrounding lands.
Montreal
The park, most of which is wooded, was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed New York's Central Park, and inaugurated in 1876.
James Corner
Fresh Kills Park is reminiscent of Olmsted's massive design for Central Park as far as work load, scale, and project purpose and design.
University of California, Irvine
Aldrich Park was designed under the direction of landscape architect Gene Uematsu, and was modeled after Frederick Law Olmsted's designs for New York City's Central Park.
University of California, Irvine campus
Aldrich Park was designed under the direction of landscape architect Gene Uematsu, and was modeled after Frederick Law Olmsted's designs for New York City's Central Park.
Kykuit
Initially, landscaping of the grounds was given to the firm of Frederick Law Olmsted, who had designed Central Park.
Louisville, Kentucky
Several of these parks were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed New York City's Central Park as well as parks, parkways, college campuses and public facilities in many U.S. locations.
American University
Landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed New York City’s Central Park, laid out AU's original campus design, though the design has been modified significantly over time.
Denis Brott
Frederick Law Olmsted who designed Central Park in New York City was commissioned to landscape the new park.
Parks and recreation in New York City
Manhattan's Central Park, also designed by Olmsted and Vaux, is the most visited city park in the United States.
Mountain View Cemetery (Oakland, California)
Mountain View was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the landscape architect who also designed New York City's Central Park and much of Stanford University.
Calvert Vaux
In 1858, he made a smart political move and collaborated with Olmsted designing Central Park.
Tourism in New York City
Manhattan's Central Park, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, is the most visited city park in the United States.
Lake Park, Milwaukee
Lake Park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed Central Park in New York City along with many others.
Branch Brook Park
The result was the park's current naturalistic look and feel, with acres of meadows and forests, in a manner similar to Olmsted's earlier designs of Central Park and Prospect Park.
High Point (New Jersey)
The brothers were the sons of Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed Central Park.
Dana Beal
The Yippie Museum Cafe and display area now occupies the first floor of Nine Bleecker Street, a landmark building designed by the partner of Frederick Law Olmsted, the man who designed Central Park.
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Noble and Greenough School
The Dedham property was previously the Nickerson family estate, and its grounds had been designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
First Unitarian Society in Newton
Architect Ralph Adams Cram designed the church, Frederick Law Olmsted designed the grounds, the cornerstone was laid in 1905, and it was dedicated in 1906.
Asylum architecture
Accomplished architects, including John Haviland, John Notman, A.J. Downing, Samuel Sloan, Thomas U. Walter, Frederick Clarke Withers, Calvert Vaux, Frederick Law Olmsted, and H.H. Richardson designed asylum grounds and buildings.
Buffalo, New York
The grounds of this hospital were designed by Olmsted.
Forest Park (St. Louis, Missouri)
A popular myth says that Frederick Law Olmsted designed the park, fair grounds and Washington University campus.
Thomas Crane Public Library
The library's grounds were designed by landscaper Frederick Law Olmsted.
Biltmore Estate
Wanting the best, Vanderbilt also employed Frederick Law Olmsted to design the grounds, including the deliberately rustic three-mile (5 km) approach road.
Hudson River State Hospital
Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted designed the grounds.
Louisiana Purchase Exposition
A popular myth says that Frederick Law Olmsted, who died the year before the fair, designed the park and fair grounds.
Upper West Side, Buffalo, New York
Here on grounds designed by Frederick Law Olmsted sits H.H. Richardson's masterpiece, the Buffalo Psychiatric Center.
Moravian Cemetery, Staten Island
The landscaped grounds around the Vanderbilt mausoleum were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
National Museum of American Illustration
The grounds for the site were designed by the noted landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, and following the purchase of the site by the NMAI founders, it has been restored as a park in Olmsted’s honor.
Leake and Watts Children's Home
1891 The Home is moved outside the city to the 40-acre (160,000 m2) farm of Edwin Forrest, the grounds were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
United States Capitol
The current grounds were designed by noted American landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who planned the expansion and landscaping performed from 1874 to 1892.
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Buffalo, New York parks system
The Buffalo, New York public parks and parkways system is the United States' oldest coordinated system of such recreational spaces, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux between 1868 and 1896.
Arthur W. Benson
Frederick Law Olmsted and his sons designed a private park system.
William Dorsheimer
He is also chiefly responsible for bringing landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted to Buffalo to design its park system.
Buffalo, New York
Buffalo was the first city for which Olmsted designed (in 1869) an interconnected park and parkway system rather than stand-alone parks.
Niagara Falls
William Dorsheimer, moved by the scene from the island, brought Olmsted to Buffalo in 1868 to design a city park system and helped promote Olmstead's career.
Fenway (parkway)
As part of the Emerald Necklace park system mainly designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the late 1800s, the Fenway, along with the Back Bay Fens and Park Drive, connects the Commonwealth Avenue Mall to the Riverway.
History of Louisville, Kentucky
The following year, famous landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted was commissioned to design Louisville's system of parks (most notably, Cherokee, Iroquois and Shawnee Parks) connected by tree-lined parkways.
Emerald Necklace
This linear system of parks was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted to connect the Boston Common (dating from the colonial period) and Public Garden (1837) to Franklin Park, known as the "great country park."
Forest Hills, Boston
Forest Hills is surrounded by the three final "links" of the Emerald Necklace park system designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1800s: Arnold Arboretum, Arborway and Franklin Park.
Delaware Park-Front Park System
The park system was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux and developed between 1868 and 1876.
Parkways of Louisville, Kentucky
A parks commission was created in 1890, and soon hired Olmsted's firm to design the entire system.
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Frederick Law Olmsted
Academic campuses designed by Olmsted
Frederick Law Olmsted
Between 1857 and 1895, Olmsted designed numerous school and college campuses.
Forest Park (St. Louis, Missouri)
A popular myth says that Frederick Law Olmsted designed the park, fair grounds and Washington University campus.
Pomfret School
The campus was designed by noted landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted in 1894.
Bryn Mawr College
The campus was designed in part by noted landscape designers Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted, and has subsequently been designated an arboretum (the Bryn Mawr Campus Arboretum).
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Union Station (Palmer, Massachusetts)
Frederick Law Olmsted designed the landscape around the station, which was used by the Central Vermont, Boston and Albany, and New London Northern Railroads.
Fairleigh Dickinson University
Landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of Central Park, was also commissioned to design the landscape for the Twombly-Vanderbilt estate (now the College at Florham campus).
Groton School
The landscape was designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who is noted for his design of Central Park in New York City and various other academic institutions.
Cushing Island, Maine
Olmsted designed the landscape of the island, along with architect John Calvin Stevens.
Palmer (Boston and Albany station)
Frederick Law Olmsted designed the landscape around the station.
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Riverway
The parkway is a link in the Emerald Necklace system of parks and parkways designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1890s.
Lake Storm "Aphid"
It is estimated that the storm damaged as many as 90 percent of the city's trees, including many in the city's cherished parks and parkways, which were designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.
The Riverway
The parkway is a link in the Emerald Necklace system of parks and parkways designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1890s.
Cazenovia Park-South Park System
The interconnected set of parkways and parks was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted as part of his parks plan for the city of Buffalo.
Kings Highway (Brooklyn)
Following the example of the parkways designed by Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903), who created Eastern and Ocean Parkways, the malls used trees to separate local and through traffic along the street.
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New York City
Prospect Park in Brooklyn, also designed by Olmsted and Vaux, has a 90-acre (360,000 m2) meadow.
Frederick Law Olmsted
Olmsted and Vaux continued their informal partnership to design Prospect Park in Brooklyn from 1865 to 1873.
Parks and recreation in New York City
Prospect Park in Brooklyn, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, has a 90 acre (360,000 m²) meadow thought to be the largest meadow in any U.S. park.
Tourism in New York City
Prospect Park in Brooklyn, also designed by Olmsted and Vaux, has a 90 acres (36 ha) meadow.
Branch Brook Park
The result was the park's current naturalistic look and feel, with acres of meadows and forests, in a manner similar to Olmsted's earlier designs of Central Park and Prospect Park.
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Greenway (landscape)
The Emerald Necklace, a series of interconnected parks in Boston, Massachusetts designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
Jamaica Plain, Boston
In the late 19th century, Boston's Emerald Necklace of parks was designed and built by Frederick Law Olmsted, with much of the southern section of the connecting parkland in or bordering on Jamaica Plain.
Brookline, Massachusetts
When the Emerald Necklace of parks and parkways was designed for Boston by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1890s, the Muddy River was integrated into the Riverway and Olmsted Park, creating parkland accessible by both Boston and Brookline residents.
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East Boston
One expansion of the airport resulted in the community losing Wood Island Park, a green space designed by the noted landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.
Riverside, Illinois
The company commissioned well-known landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted and his partner, Calvert Vaux, to design a rural bedroom community.
Streetcar suburb
A famous community served was Riverside, arguably one of the first planned communities in the United States, designed in 1869 by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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H.H. Richardson Historic District of North Easton
The area also includes The Rockery, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also landscaped grounds of Oakes Ames Memorial Hall and the Ames Free Library.
Easton, Massachusetts
The area also includes The Rockery, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also landscaped grounds of Oakes Ames Memorial Hall and the Ames Free Library.
The Rockery
The Rockery, also known as the Memorial Cairn, is an unusual war memorial designed by the noted American landscaper Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Boston
Along with the adjacent Boston Public Garden, it is part of the Emerald Necklace, a string of parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted to encircle the city.
Jamaica Pond
Jamaica Pond is a kettle pond, part of the Emerald Necklace of parks in Boston designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
U.S. Capitol Gatehouses and Gateposts
The gatehouses were removed from the Capitol grounds in 1874 as part of landscaping renovations designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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John James Audubon
In Boston, Massachusetts, Frederick Law Olmsted designed a greenway, monumental roadway and traffic circle; the latter was named Audubon Circle in honor of the artist.
Lawrenceville School
The "Circle Houses" are named for their location on a landscaped circle designed by the 19th-century landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who is most famous for designing New York City's Central Park.
The Lawrenceville School
The "Circle Houses" are named for their location on a landscaped circle designed by the 19th-century landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who is most famous for designing New York City's Central Park.
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Lake Park, Milwaukee
Lake Park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed Central Park in New York City along with many others.
Neighborhoods of Milwaukee
Frederick Law Olmsted - famed designer of New York's Central Park - designed both Lake Park and Riverside Park (originally "River Park"), with Newberry Boulevard being the deliberate connector between the two.
East Side, Milwaukee
Frederick Law Olmsted - famed designer of New York's Central Park - designed both Lake Park and Riverside Park (originally "River Park"), with Newberry Boulevard being the deliberate connector between the two.
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Riverway
The parkway is a link in the Emerald Necklace system of parks and parkways designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1890s.
The Riverway
The parkway is a link in the Emerald Necklace system of parks and parkways designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1890s.
Landmark Center
The building is located at the intersection of Park Drive and Brookline Avenue where the Riverway and the Back Bay Fens, two links of the Emerald Necklace park system designed in the 19th century by Frederick Law Olmsted, meet.
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Back Bay Fens
Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted to serve as a link in the Emerald Necklace park system, the Fens gives its name to the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood, and thereby to Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox.
Back Bay Fens
Olmsted designed the Fens to be flushed by the tides twice daily.
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Asylum architecture
Accomplished architects, including John Haviland, John Notman, A.J. Downing, Samuel Sloan, Thomas U. Walter, Frederick Clarke Withers, Calvert Vaux, Frederick Law Olmsted, and H.H. Richardson designed asylum grounds and buildings.
United States Capitol
Olmsted also designed the Summer House, the open-air brick building that sits just north of the Capitol.
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Albany, New York
Washington Park's current layout was designed in 1868 by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Bushnell Park
Reverend Bushnell asked his good friend and Hartford native, Frederick Law Olmsted, to design the layout of the park.
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Hingham, Massachusetts
In 1889, a wealthy Hingham resident, John Brewer, commissioned Frederick Law Olmsted to design a residential subdivision on a peninsula Brewer owned adjacent to Hingham Harbor.
World's End (Hingham, Massachusetts)
In 1889, noted landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted was commissioned by Brewer to design a residential subdivision there.
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Tome School
The tree-lined streets of the campus were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and converged at the steps of Memorial Hall.
Piedmont Avenue (Berkeley)
This curvilinear, tree-lined parkway was Olmsted's first residential street design.
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Riverside Drive (Manhattan)
Riverside Drive was designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted as part of his concept for Riverside Park.
Upper West Side
The first segment of park was acquired through condemnation in 1872, and construction soon began following a design created by the firm of Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed the adjacent, gracefully curving Riverside Drive.
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Auburn University
Auburn's initial Campus Master plan was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Beechmont, Louisville
The park, purchased by Louisville Mayor Charles Donald Jacob in 1889 and completed in 1893, was connected to the city by Southern Parkway (originally called Grand Parkway), in a master plan designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Neighborhoods of Milwaukee
Frederick Law Olmsted - famed designer of New York's Central Park - designed both Lake Park and Riverside Park (originally "River Park"), with Newberry Boulevard being the deliberate connector between the two.
East Side, Milwaukee
Frederick Law Olmsted - famed designer of New York's Central Park - designed both Lake Park and Riverside Park (originally "River Park"), with Newberry Boulevard being the deliberate connector between the two.
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Neighborhoods of Milwaukee
Frederick Law Olmsted - famed designer of New York's Central Park - designed both Lake Park and Riverside Park (originally "River Park"), with Newberry Boulevard being the deliberate connector between the two.
East Side, Milwaukee
Frederick Law Olmsted - famed designer of New York's Central Park - designed both Lake Park and Riverside Park (originally "River Park"), with Newberry Boulevard being the deliberate connector between the two.
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Highland Park, Rochester, New York
Highland Park is one of many parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Maplewood Park
The park was laid out by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed nearby Highland Park.
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The Jamaicaway
The Jamaicaway was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted as part of a series of parks and parkways extending from downtown Boston to Franklin Park in Roxbury.
Jamaicaway
The Jamaicaway was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted as part of a series of parks and parkways extending from downtown Boston to Franklin Park in Roxbury.
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General Electric Realty Plot
They took their inspiration from New York City's Central Park, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux.
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Cazenovia Park-South Park System
The interconnected set of parkways and parks was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted as part of his parks plan for the city of Buffalo.
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Rochester, New York
These features are the result of plans designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Rochester, New York
These features are the result of plans designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Riverside, Illinois
Riverside is arguably one of the first planned communities in the United States, designed in 1869 by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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East Side, Buffalo, New York
Notable destinations include the Broadway Market, St. Stanislaus - Bishop & Martyr Church, St. Adalbert's Basilica, Corpus Christi R. C. Church Complex, Buffalo Central Terminal, the Adam Mickiewicz Library and Dramatic Circle, the Matt Urban Human Services Center, the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Park, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, and the Frank E. Merriweather Public Library, designed by architect Robert Traynham Coles.
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World's End
World's End (Hingham, Massachusetts), open space preserve located in Hingham, Massachusetts designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Manhattanville College
The centerpiece of the campus is a quadrangle designed in part by Frederick Law Olmsted, who was hired by Reid to landscape his estate.
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Manhattanville College
The centerpiece of the campus is a quadrangle designed in part by Frederick Law Olmsted, who was hired by Reid to landscape his estate.
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Arnold Arboretum
The Arboretum remains one of the finest examples of a landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and it is a Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site) and a National Historic Landmark.
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Milwaukee
The "Grand Necklace of Parks", designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York's Central Park, includes Lake Park, River Park (now Riverside Park), and West Park (now Washington Park).
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Crown Heights, Brooklyn
The main thoroughfare through this neighborhood is Eastern Parkway, a tree-lined boulevard designed by Frederick Law Olmsted extending two miles (3 km) east-west.
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Jamaica Plain, Boston
In the 19th century, Jamaica Plain became one of the first streetcar suburbs in America and home to a significant portion of Boston's Emerald Necklace of parks, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Seneca Park
Seneca Park was the last park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in Louisville, Kentucky, United States.
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Arborway
It was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1890s as the south most carriage road in a series of parkways connecting parks from Boston Common in downtown Boston to Franklin Park in Roxbury.
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Neighborhoods of Milwaukee
Washington Park, (originally West Park), a 128.5-acre (520,000 m2) focal point and namesake of the neighborhood, was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, famed designer of New York's Central Park, and built in 1891.
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Piedmont Avenue, Oakland, California
At the north end of Piedmont Avenue and Pleasant Valley Avenue is the hillside Mountain View Cemetery, which was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and contains the Julia Morgan designed Chapel of the Chimes.
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Belle Isle Park
At 982 acre (3.9 km²; 2.42 sq mi), Belle Isle Park is the largest city island park and is larger than Central Park in New York City, also designed by Olmsted.
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Landmarks of Montreal
Mount Royal is Montreal's outstanding urban park, designed in 1876 by Frederick Law Olmsted, best known as the designer of New York's Central Park.
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Piedmont Avenue, Oakland, California
At the north end of Piedmont Avenue and Pleasant Valley Avenue is the hillside Mountain View Cemetery, which was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and contains the Julia Morgan designed Chapel of the Chimes.
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Druid Hills, Georgia
Druid Hills was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and was one of his last commissions.
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Landmark Center
The building is located at the intersection of Park Drive and Brookline Avenue where the Riverway and the Back Bay Fens, two links of the Emerald Necklace park system designed in the 19th century by Frederick Law Olmsted, meet.
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Jeffersonville Quartermaster Depot
Frederick Law Olmsted also helped design the facility, and much of his vision still exists with its brick structures and arched glass portals, but more of Meigs' vision won out.
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Landmark Center
The building is located at the intersection of Park Drive and Brookline Avenue where the Riverway and the Back Bay Fens, two links of the Emerald Necklace park system designed in the 19th century by Frederick Law Olmsted, meet.
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Charles River Reservation
Frederick Law Olmsted's 1889 design for Charlesbank included the first outdoor gymnasium in the United States.
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Piedmont Avenue, Oakland, California
At the north end of Piedmont Avenue and Pleasant Valley Avenue is the hillside Mountain View Cemetery, which was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and contains the Julia Morgan designed Chapel of the Chimes.
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Shakespeare in Delaware Park
Productions are performed for the public at no cost in Buffalo's Delaware Park, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Iroquois Park
It was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed Louisville's Cherokee Park and Shawnee Park, at what were then the edges of the city.
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Iroquois Park
It was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed Louisville's Cherokee Park and Shawnee Park, at what were then the edges of the city.
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Horace Cleveland
In 1872, Cleveland was retained by the city of Chicago to rebuild South Park, originally designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, after the great Chicago fire.
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Wheatleigh
Frederick Law Olmsted, who famously designed New York's Central Park, designed Wheatleigh's surrounding lands.
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Southside, Berkeley, California
Except for a small area around Piedmont Avenue designed by Olmsted, the streets were laid out in a 1/8 by 1/8 mile grid, and named alphabetically for prominent academics.
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Greenway (landscape)
The Emerald Necklace, a series of interconnected parks in Boston, Massachusetts designed by Frederick Law Olmsted
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Cherokee Triangle, Louisville
It is named for nearby Cherokee Park, a 409 acres (1.7 km2) park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York's Central Park.
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Cherokee Triangle, Louisville
It is named for nearby Cherokee Park, a 409 acres (1.7 km2) park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York's Central Park.
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The Rockery
The Rockery, also known as the Memorial Cairn, is an unusual war memorial designed by the noted American landscaper Frederick Law Olmsted.
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United States Capitol
Olmsted also designed the Summer House, the open-air brick building that sits just north of the Capitol.
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Scranton, Pennsylvania
Nay Aug park is the largest of several parks in Scranton and was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of Central Park in Manhattan, New York City.
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Public Garden (Boston)
Together with the Boston Common, these two parks form the northern terminus of the Emerald Necklace, a long string of parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
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Bryn Mawr College
The campus was designed in part by noted landscape designers Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted, and has subsequently been designated an arboretum (the Bryn Mawr Campus Arboretum).
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Commonwealth Avenue, Boston
Frederick Law Olmsted designed the Newton portion of Commonwealth Ave and included the parkway as part of the Emerald Necklace park system.
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