
Nelson Byrd Woltz
Articles
-
1 week ago |
virginialiving.com | Nelson Byrd Woltz |Madeline Mayhood
The Land is Full, by Nelson Byrd Woltz. The Monacelli Press, 2024The latest book by Nelson Byrd Woltz (NBW), the renowned landscape architecture firm in Charlottesville, is a celebration of parks and public gardens whose designs reflect the land's histories.
-
Jan 23, 2025 |
gardenista.com | Nelson Byrd Woltz |Melissa Ozawa
This is part of a series with Perfect Earth Project, a nonprofit dedicated to toxic-free, nature-based gardening, on how you can be more sustainable in your landscapes at home. Not far from the Brooklyn waterfront, the Naval Cemetery Landscape (NCL) is both a memorial to the dead and a haven for the living, teeming with lush native plants and countless birds and pollinators.
-
Jan 15, 2025 |
prweb.com | Nelson Byrd Woltz |Keswick Hall
Keswick Hall in Charlottesville, Virginia, is pleased to announce it has been inducted into Historic Hotels of America®, /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Keswick Hall in Charlottesville, Virginia, is pleased to announce it has been inducted into Historic Hotels of America®, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation for recognizing, celebrating, and promoting the finest historic hotels in the United States.
-
Dec 9, 2024 |
hhlloo.com | Nelson Byrd Woltz
休斯顿首屈一指的户外休闲区纪念公园最近开放了纪念公园总体规划的最新阶段,即跑步综合体,其中包括由 Schaum Architects 设计的当地餐厅 Vibrant 的新址。Memorial Park, Houston’s premier outdoor recreation area, has recently opened the newest phase of the Memorial Park Master Plan, the Running Complex, which features a new location of the local restaurant, Vibrant, designed by Schaum Architects.
-
Nov 20, 2024 |
architecturalrecord.com | Pansy Schulman |Nelson Byrd Woltz
When brewer and merchant Matthew Vassar established Vassar College in 1861as a philanthropic project, nearly all of campus life was centered in one building. This “great lumbering pile of brick and mortar,” as the college’s first president, John Raymond called it, was designed by James Renwick, Jr. in the style of the Tuileries Palace in Paris. Its sheer bulk and majesty embodied the institution’s lofty aim: to provide an education for women that rivaled that of the then-all-male Ivy Leagues.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →