[[wiki-architecture]] · [[Biographies]] · [[ARCHITECTURE]] · [[000]]
# Country Place Era
The Country Place Era was a period, from about 1890 to 1930, of American landscape architecture design during which wealthy Americans commissioned extensive gardens at their country estates, emulating European gardens that the Americans had seen in their European travels. An example is Castle Hill in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Landscape architects that were involved included Charles Gillette, Frederick Law Olmsted, Charles Adam Platt, and Beatrix Farrand. Marian Cruger Coffin, an early female architect, was another participant as well as Ellen Shipman and Beatrix Farrand.
== See also ==
Twin Bridges Rural Historic District, Pennsylvania
Historic Country Estates in Lake County, Ohio
Noerenberg Estate Barn in Orono, Minnesota
== References ==
- [[Urban and Planning/Town & Country Planning]]
- [[Urban and Planning/Urban Regeneration]]
- [[Wiki-Architecture/General Architecture]]
- [[Urban and Planning/Public Space]]
- [[Professional Practice/Codes & Standards/National Building Code of India/Part 06 - Structural Design/Section 4 - Masonry]]
- [[Landscape/Surveying & Mapping]]
- [[History and Theory/Temple Architecture/Stone Temples of India/satellites]]
- [[Environmental Design/Strong Foundations for Sustainable Constructions/satellites]]
- [[Design/Building Typologies/Residential Architecture]]
- [[Building Construction/Structural Systems/Timber Structures]]