OLMSTED BROTHERS

The 'Olmsted Brothers' company was an influential landscape design firm in the United States, formed in 1898 by step-brothers John Charles Olmsted (1852-1920) and Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. (1870-1957), who had inherited the nation's first landscaping practice from their father, Frederick Law Olmsted. This firm was a successor to the earlier firm of Olmsted, Olmsted and Eliot after the untimely death of their gifted partner Charles Eliot. The two brothers were also among the founding members of the American Society of Landscape Architects, and played an influential role in creating the National Park Service.
The Olmsted Brothers completed numerous high-profile projects, many of which remain popular to this day, including park systems, universities, exposition grounds, libraries, hospitals, residential neighborhoods and state capitols. Notable commissions include the United States Capitol and White House Grounds, Great Smoky Mountains and Acadia National Parks, Yosemite Valley, New York's Central Park, Atlanta's Piedmont Park, a residential neighborhood in Oak Bay, British Columbia, Canada [Uplands] and entire park systems in cities such as Seattle, Boston and Louisville. (Please note that this list includes the works of both the Olmstead Brothers and their father.) The firm employed nearly 60 staff at its peak in the early 1930s. Notable landscape architects in the firm included James Frederick Dawson. The last family member in the firm, Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., retired in 1949.
"Fairsted", the firm's 100 year old business headquarters and design office, has been carefully preserved as the Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site, located on 7 acres (28,000 m²) of landscaped grounds at 99 Warren St., Brookline, Massachusetts. It offers excellent insights into the actual practice of large-scale landscape design and engineering.

Contents
Selected Olmsted Brothers landscape designs
External links

Selected Olmsted Brothers landscape designs



Elm Bank Horticulture Center

Fort Tryon Park

Locust Valley Cemetery

Fresh Pond, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Kentucky State Capitol Grounds, Frankfort, Kentucky

Otto Kahn Estate, Cold Spring Hills, New York

Pope Park, Hartford, Connecticut

Seattle Park System

University of Washington campus, Seattle
[1]

Verona Park, Verona, New Jersey

Huntingdon College campus, [2]

Marquette Park, Chicago, Illinois

Manito Park and Botanical Gardens, Spokane, WA

External links



Olmsted His Essential Theory

Olmsted Parks in Seattle -- A Snapshot History at HistoryLink.org

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