Green Spring Gardens - Alexandria, Virginia
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member flyingmoose
N 38° 49.401 W 077° 09.382
18S E 312803 N 4299382
Botanical Garden located at the intersection of Braddock and Witch Hazel Road
Waymark Code: WM14KQC
Location: Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 07/22/2021
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Metro2
Views: 0

Green Spring Gardens is a 31 acre botanical garden that focuses on practical landscaping and garden techniques that are designed for the Washington D.C. region. located on the property of what was once a historical homestead. The property was donated to Fairfax County in 1970. The gardens are filled with perennials, roses, boxwood hedging, greenhouse, woodland, native plant garden, pond, gazebo and more. There is a large volunteer contingency to upkeep the gardens so contributions are appreciated upon your visit.

Taken from Wikipedia:
Green Spring Gardens (31 acres) is a public park, including a historic 18th-century plantation house "Green Spring", which is the heart of a national historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003. The Fairfax County Park Authority operates Green Spring with the assistance of various nonprofit organizations concerned with history and gardening. Open daily without charge, the street address is 4603 Green Spring Road, Alexandria, Virginia.

Holdings
The historic district encompasses two contributing buildings, two contributing sites, and two contributing structures located within the park. It includes the brick farmhouse, built about 1777–1784, a 19th-century spring house, a family cemetery, archaeological site, subterranean brick vault, and a small 4-chambered stone structure. The property's landscape was redesigned in 1942, in the Colonial Revival style by noted landscape architects Beatrix Farrand and Walter Macomber. The house and grounds were donated to Fairfax County in 1970 by New Republic publisher Michael Whitney Straight and his wife Belinda Straight, who had moved their family to Washington D.C. during Massive Resistance.

Its estate gardens (popular among local wedding photographers) feature boxwood hedging, roses, and perennial as well as annual borders. The park also has a tropical greenhouse, a wooded stream valley with ponds and gazebo, a naturalistic native plant garden, and over 20 demonstration gardens. It is a member of the North American Plant Collections Consortium for its Hamamelis collection (130 taxa, including all 4 species).

Wikipedia Url: [Web Link]

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