Over the past ten years the preservation of mid-century architecture has become a cultural fixation. If a house by R.M. Schindler went on the market today, a five-alarm rescue operation would follow. If anything, architects like Richard Neutra and Paul Rudolph carry more cache today than when they practiced.
Their contemporaries in landscape architecture? Not so much. How many of us have even heard of masters like Dan Kiley who designed the Miller Garden in Columbus, Indiana (photo above)?
Of the more than 80,000 properties on the National Register of Historic Places, fewer than 1,900 have an element of landscape. The irony is that mid-century architecture tended to emphasize the indoor-outdoor aspect, but preservationists largely ignore the outdoor portion of the sites.
Why do Americans value buildings, but not landscapes? For whatever reason, we tend to see open space as a blank spot waiting for development. For too many of us, designed landscapes means dog runs, cafés, and skateboard ramps. It's hard to make the case for saving Modernist landscapes like the NationsBank Plaza in Tampa (above) because they depart from the convention of the pretty, pastoral scene fixed in our minds by Frederick Law Olmsted.
If landscapes are now claiming a place on the preservation agenda it's due largely to Charles Birnbaum, founder of the Cultural Landscape Foundation, a group dedicated to saving public plazas, private modernist gardens, estate grounds, and historic parks. Birnbaum acts as the James Carville of landscapes, swooping into cities across the country and organizing grassroots campaigns to save under appreciated sites like Heritage Park Plaza in Fort Worth, Texas (above).
Landscape preservation is one of the few fields to have benefited from the economic downturn. As the pace of development slows, Birnbaum gains time to muster support for places like grounds of Bell Laboratories in Holmdel, N.J., which Eero Saarinen designed in the late 1950s. "It is an opportunity for research, documentation, potential designation, deeper and more thoughtful planning and analysis," he told me this week.
Related Stories: | Topics:Design, Michael Cannell, Charles Birnbaum, Preservation, Dan Kiley, Richard Neutra, Charles Birnbaum, R.M. Schindler, Paul Rudolph, Richard Neutra, Dan Kiley |
Recent Comments | 9 Total
May 27, 2009 at 1:12pm by Andrew Spiering
Thank you so much for writing this article! I feel as many other Landscape Architects do that the general public really does not understand what we do. Educating the the general public is a great start.
Thanks!
September 1, 2009 at 11:26am by John McCarthy
Perhaps we can see some benefits from economic downturn. I'm sure the buying power is lesser now to invest in any real estate properties. Now, the developers starts to look at empty land in different perspective than building up some house of office lots. I wish to have my home nearby this type of landscape area. I would love to wallk my pet (dog) around places like this.
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September 18, 2009 at 5:59am by David Greiner
Hey,
finally something positive about the economic downturn. And don't forget that designing a landscape or garden is much cheaper than building an office block. Thanks for the nice article.
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September 28, 2009 at 10:24am by Reena Ashwina
Looks like landscape business is on the peak now. However, I don't really see this happens in my area especially near town area. Land value is simply huge to turn that into preservation. A small lot of 2-3 acres are made to condomoniums or office lots. Hope, this economic downturn will slow this massive nature disaster.
Work At Home
October 17, 2009 at 9:50pm by Freddy Boswell
These historic sites should develop their landscapes, it does look so much more appealing.
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October 27, 2009 at 7:40am by Natali Jason
nice place
October 27, 2009 at 7:40am by Natali Jason
nice place
November 5, 2009 at 1:22am by James Samuelson
Landscape preservation is one of the few fields to have benefited from the economic downturn. So true considering that it gets more expensive to invest in new buildings probably the only thing they can consider buying is a lawn fertilizer...