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Longwood Staff Assist with Hurricane Irma Recovery
A group of Longwood staff

Longwood Staff Assist with Hurricane Irma Recovery

Four months after Hurricane Irma slammed into Florida’s Gulf Coast, some public gardens are still picking up the pieces. On December 10, 2017, Longwood sent a team of 12 staff members to Florida to assist with post-hurricane recovery at Montgomery Botanical Center (Coral Gables), Naples Botanical Garden, and Vizcaya Museum and Gardens (Miami), all of which suffered extensive damage.

By Koa Kanamee, Joyce Rondinella & April Bevans, on January 19, 2018
That Mysterious Place
black and white image of a basin and rock tower

That Mysterious Place

Now that the Main Fountain Garden is open, visitors can once again access the lower half of one of the most mysterious features at Longwood—the Chimes Tower. Kids and grown-ups alike are fascinated by this fairytale structure that stands prominently in the landscape.

By Colvin Randall, on January 1, 2018
A Longwood Christmas à la Française!

A Longwood Christmas à la Française!

This year, our horticulturists are celebrating Christmas with a French flair, heralding the season with many a fleur-de-lis. You’ll spy this floral symbol of French royalty throughout our Conservatory—as ornaments on trees, in the design of the fruit floating on the Fern Floor of Exhibition Hall, and in the living wreath near the Potting Shed. A sense of luxury and opulence weaves through our Garden spaces, creating a tapestry of exquisite details. In a single visit, transport yourself to the palatial rooms of Versailles or to the quiet countryside of Provence, with your imagination as your passport.

By Heather Coletti, on December 8, 2017
Nurturing Rainbows
fireworks bursting in a rainbow of colors

Nurturing Rainbows

The completion of the Main Fountain Garden in 1938 is followed by periodic change and transformation.

By Colvin Randall, on December 1, 2017
The “Nuts & Berries” of our Parterre Garden
a floor filled with apples, trees, and fountains

The “Nuts & Berries” of our Parterre Garden

Longwood’s Christmas display develops around a theme—some unifying concept that ties together the colors and imagery throughout the Conservatory. The theme is chosen by our horticulture staff, who then involve colleagues from throughout the Gardens to brainstorm ideas and come up with different ways to express the theme. This year we were inspired by the motifs of classical French design. As soon as the French theme was chosen, we all agreed, “There must be a parterre garden!”

By Erin Feeney, on December 1, 2017
Students Discover Joy in a Job Well Done
a group of children smiling for the camera with topiaries in the background

Students Discover Joy in a Job Well Done

“It’s heaven,” exclaimed Natalie Kramer when the twinkling white and blue lights began to dance for the first time in our Topiary Garden. Kramer is one of four students who have been working since September assisting Longwood Staff members on the building and installation of the Gardens’ newest holiday light display.

By Patricia Evans, on November 29, 2017
Flamenco Dancer Stomps on Competition
A fall flower bed arrangement in an array of red, pink and dark purple colors

Flamenco Dancer Stomps on Competition

In October we wrapped up our third season of a friendly competition in our Trial Garden. Our gardeners submitted plant combinations and designs that were showcased for all of our guests to enjoy—and vote for their favorites!

By Stacee Snyder, on November 15, 2017
Longwood Fellows Dive into the Business of Public Gardens
a sign of University of Virginia Darden School of Business

Longwood Fellows Dive into the Business of Public Gardens

Great public gardens must function as successful businesses to provide maximum impact and return on their mission. Leaders of nonprofit organizations focus on mission while also exercising fiscal discipline in order to meet their strategic objectives.

By Neil Gerlowski, on November 6, 2017
Get to Know Our Chrysanthemum Festival
yellow and orange chrysanthemums surrounded by green vegetation

Get to Know Our Chrysanthemum Festival

As Longwood’s Display Designer, it is my responsibility to make sure that our Chrysanthemum Festival is beautiful and engaging. In order to make the Festival successful we rely on a very talented group of individuals, and it is my privilege to lead the creative process. The plans for Chrysanthemum Festival happen more than one year in advance, starting with my conceptual plan that takes into account color, height, texture, and other aesthetic considerations.

By Jim Sutton, Display Designer, on November 1, 2017
A Grand Return Filled with Gratitude
fountains illuminated in rainbow of colors

A Grand Return Filled with Gratitude

This past May, as we debuted our Main Fountain Garden, I was filled with awe and anticipation. Watching the revitalization over these last few years has been humbling, to say the least. Fast track 158 days later and the reception the garden received in its summer-into-fall revival surpassed all our expectations.

By Paul B. Redman, on October 26, 2017
A Visit to Longwood Gardens
Martha Stewart with James Sutton, Senior Horticultural Display Designer, and James Harbage, PhD, Director, Floriculture and Conservatories

A Visit to Longwood Gardens

While I was at QVC earlier this week, I had the opportunity to visit the exquisite Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square. If you are in the area through November 19th, stop by and visit the Chrysanthemum Festival, where you’ll see thousands of colorful mums planted in orbs, spirals, and pagodas—you’ll love it. Here are photos from my recent visit to Longwood Gardens—enjoy.

By Martha Stewart, on October 24, 2017
Bartram’s Garden Welcomes Longwood Fellows
a group of five people standing in a small garden

Bartram’s Garden Welcomes Longwood Fellows

In the early 1800s, at the country’s first botanic garden, Ann Bartram Carr welcomed boaters by serving them ice cream. Today, neighborhood kids ride Bartram’s Garden kayaks out to a raft on the Schuylkill River where they, too, are greeted with free ice cream. Such is the spirit of welcome that we, the Longwood Fellows, were greeted with during our recent visit to Bartram’s Garden.

By Julia Thomé, on September 21, 2017
Our Otherworldly Grotto
indoor daytime image of water cascading in the grotto

Our Otherworldly Grotto

Grottos are natural or artificial caves used since antiquity as spaces of devotion or retreat in the landscape. From the the caves of Homer’s Odyssey and Ovid’s Metamorphoses, to the rock-cut grottos of Hellenistic Rhodes and spring-fed crypts of Apollo’s oracle at Delphi, the tradition of grottos is founded at the intersection of history and myth.

By Miriam Kelly, Senior Associate, Beyer Blinder Belle, on August 25, 2017
Longwood Fellows Engage in Leadership Salon

Longwood Fellows Engage in Leadership Salon

On July 27, the inaugural cohort of Longwood Fellows traveled to Drexel University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for the first in a series of Leadership Salons that will expose the Fellows to thought leaders in public horticulture and beyond and to the challenging topics they face in the nonprofit sector. This first salon, led by Danielle Rice, Ph.D., Director of Museum Leadership at Drexel University’s Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts and Design, focused on the history of urban public spaces—an appropriate place to begin.

By Neil Gerlowski, on August 16, 2017
America’s Versailles
numerous people walking along the paths alongside the Main Fountain Garden at Longwood Gardens

America’s Versailles

West 8 urban design & landscape architecture has had the privilege of serving as master planners and landscape architects at Longwood Gardens since 2009. During this time, our team has gotten to know the culture, staff, traditions and seasons at Longwood, and walked every corner of the 1,077-acre site. For the Master Plan and the Main Fountain Garden we have worked with Longwood to take a big step back from the complex details of the horticulture and day-to-day operations. Along with our client team at Longwood, we have a huge ambition—to further root the Gardens within the canon of the greatest gardens of the world.

By Claire Agre, Principal & Senior Landscape Architect at West 8 urban design & landscape architecture, on August 11, 2017
Follow the Fellows

Follow the Fellows

“Leadership” can be an amorphous term. Most agree that it is an important quality to possess these days, from scholars to the average person on the street, but how is the term defined and what does it mean to study leadership in 2017? Beginning with this post, the Longwood Gardens Fellows invite you to “Follow the Fellows” as they define the term for themselves and actively seek to develop their leadership skills and personal brands.

By Dr. Tamara Fleming, on August 10, 2017
Shedding Light on Moths
A large brown and orange cecropia moth on a hand

Shedding Light on Moths

This July, in the dark of the new moon, an unusual celebration will be taking place all over the United States. No, it’s not the Fourth of July—it’s National Moth Week! From July 22 through July 30, nature lovers and moth enthusiasts across the country will be celebrating these secretive, under-appreciated insects.

By Colin McCallum-Cook, on July 17, 2017
Celebrating Our Founder, Fountains, and Flowing Water

Celebrating Our Founder, Fountains, and Flowing Water

In July 1906, Pierre S. du Pont purchased the rights to the historic Peirce’s Park and surrounding lands, thereby establishing Longwood Gardens. One hundred and eleven years after Mr. du Pont’s purchase, we commemorate this historic act with our Founder’s Day weekend of festivities.

By Jennifer Fazekas, on July 7, 2017
A Flourish of Fountains

A Flourish of Fountains

Longwood is home to the most significant fountain collection in North America and in June we celebrate all the fountains in our Gardens. From Pierre S. du Pont’s first single-jet fountain on the Flower Garden Walk to the 1,719-jet Main Fountain Garden, guests can learn more about Longwood’s fountains with tours and two new exhibits...

By Lynn Schuessler, on June 9, 2017
The Way Things Work Now: A Community Read
A book sitting atop a table

The Way Things Work Now: A Community Read

What does our 2017 Community Read selection, The Way Things Work Now, have in common with our Main Fountain Garden? Both are works of art and engineering that engage the imagination. Both were created by masters of their fields—David Macaulay is an award-winning author whose words and drawings help us imagine how technology works, while Pierre S. du Pont was a visionary business leader whose love of fountains placed that technology on spectacular display. It’s one thing to stand in awe of such technological wonders—and quite another thing to wonder, and to seek to understand. That’s what David Macaulay and this year’s Community Read do so well—they make us wonder not only about things that inspire awe, but also about things we might otherwise take for granted.

By Lynn Schuessler, on April 12, 2017