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{{Infobox zoo
|zoo_name = Brooklyn Botanic Garden
|logo = Brooklyn Botanic Garden (logo).png
|logo_width = 200px
|logo_caption = Current logo
|image = Brooklyn_botanic_garden_fragrance_garden_gate.jpg
|image_caption= Brooklyn Botanic Garden
|date_opened = Founded in 1910
|location = 990 Washington Avenue, within [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]], [[Brooklyn]], [[New York (state)|New York]] 11225<br>[[United States]]
|coordinates = {{coord|40|40|7.32|N|73|57|52.92|W|type:landmark_scale:2500|display=inline,title}}
|area = {{convert|52|acre|ha}}
|num_species = 12,000<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.bbg.org/research/plant_collection | title=BBG's Plant Collection}}</ref>
|annual_visitors= 725,000<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.bbg.org/press/capital_campaign | title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden Announces $7.5M Leon Levy Foundation Gift}}</ref>
|publictransit = '''[[New York City Subway]]:'''{{bulleted list|{{NYCS Franklin-Botanic|time=bullets}} at [[Franklin Avenue/Botanic Garden (New York City Subway)|Franklin Avenue/Botanic Garden]]|{{NYCS Prospect Park|time=bullets}} at [[Prospect Park (BMT lines)|Prospect Park]]}}'''[[New York City Bus]]:''' {{NYC bus link|B41|B48}}
|website = http://www.bbg.org/
}}
'''Brooklyn Botanic Garden''' ('''BBG''') is a [[botanical garden]] in the [[Borough (New York City)|borough]] of [[Brooklyn]] in [[New York City]]. Founded in 1910 and located in [[Mount Prospect Park]], next to [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]] and the [[Brooklyn Museum]], the {{convert|52|acre|ha|adj=on}} garden includes a number of specialty "gardens within the Garden", plant collections and the Steinhardt Conservatory, which houses the [[C. V. Starr]] Bonsai Museum, three climate-themed plant pavilions, a white [[cast iron|cast-iron]] and glass [[aquatic plant]] house, and an [[art gallery]]. The Garden holds over 14,000 taxa of plants and each year has over 900,000 visitors.
==History==
The original impetus to build [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]] stemmed from an April 18, 1859, act of the New York State Legislature, empowering a twelve-member commission to recommend sites for parks in the [[City of Brooklyn]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BBYZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1|title=Laws Relating to the Public Parks, Parkways, and Other Property Under the Care and Control of the Brooklyn Park Commissioners|last=Anderson|first=J.A.|year=1887|page=1|access-date=January 20, 2019}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite news|url=https://bklyn.newspapers.com/clip/3137046/|title=Public Parks and Promenades|date=May 29, 1860|work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle|access-date=January 19, 2019|page=2|via=Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com}} {{open access}}</ref> In February 1860, a group of fifteen commissioners submitted suggestions for park locations in Brooklyn, including a {{convert|320|acre|km2|adj=on}} plot centered on present-day [[Mount Prospect Park]] and bounded by Warren Street to the north; Vanderbilt, Ninth, and Tenth Avenues to the west; Third and Ninth Streets to the south; and Washington Avenue to the east.<ref name="Lancaster">{{cite book|url=https://www.echonyc.com/~parks/books/handbook.html|title=Prospect Park Handbook|last=Lancaster|first=Clay|publisher=Long Island University Press|year=1972|isbn=978-0-913252-06-2|edition=2nd|location=New York|pages=}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://bklyn.newspapers.com/clip/27409545/|title=Prospect Park|date=May 19, 1861|work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle|access-date=January 19, 2019|page=2|via=Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com}} {{open access}}</ref> [[Egbert Viele]] began drawing plans for the park, which was to straddle Flatbush Avenue and include Prospect Hill, as well as the land now occupied by the [[Central Library (Brooklyn Public Library)|Brooklyn Public Library]], Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and [[Brooklyn Museum]].<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name=":9">{{cite journal|last=Bluestone|first=Daniel M.|year=1987|title=From Promenade to Park: The Gregarious Origins of Brooklyn's Park Movement|journal=American Quarterly|publisher=JSTOR|volume=39|issue=4|pages=529–550|doi=10.2307/2713123|issn=0003-0678|jstor=2713123}}</ref> The onset of the [[American Civil War|Civil War]] stopped further activity.<ref name=":9" /> [[Calvert Vaux]] was hired to review Viele's plans early in 1865.<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name="PPAHistory">{{cite web|url=https://www.prospectpark.org/learn-more/park-history-slideshow/|title=History and Nature: History of the Park|year=2007|publisher=Prospect Park Alliance|accessdate=November 23, 2007}}</ref> Vaux took issue with Flatbush Avenue's division of the park, among other things.<ref name="PPGuide">{{cite book|title=The Complete Illustrated Guidebook to Prospect Park and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden|last=Berenson|first=Richard J.|author2=deMause, Neil|publisher=Silver Lining Books|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7607-2213-8|location=New York|pages=|authorlink2=Neil deMause}}</ref>{{Rp|86–91}} Vaux's February 1865 proposal excluded parcels already purchased east of Flatbush Avenue, including Prospect Hill itself.<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name=":5">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1868/12/15/archives/prospect-park-progress-of-the-workdescriptive-particulars.html|title=Prospect Park; Progress of the Work—Descriptive Particulars.|date=December 15, 1868|work=The New York Times|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331|access-date=January 28, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/stream/annualreportsofb1873broo/annualreportsofb1873broo_djvu.txt|title=Annual reports of the Brooklyn Park Commissioners, 1861–1873|last=|first=|date=1873|publisher=Brooklyn Park Commissioners|isbn=|location=|page=127|access-date=January 28, 2019|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> The northeast portion went unused, serving as an ash dump.
Legislation in 1897 as the city moved [[History of New York City|toward consolidation]] reserved 39 acres (16 ha) for a botanic garden, and the garden itself was founded in 1910.<ref name="bbg">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/about/history |title=A Brief History of BBG |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> The garden was initially known as the Institute Park. It was run under the auspices of the [[Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences]], which included (until the 1970s) the [[Brooklyn Museum]], [[Brooklyn Children's Museum]], and [[Brooklyn Academy of Music]].<ref name="bm">{{cite web |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/about/building.php |title=About the Brooklyn Museum's Building | website=Brooklyn Museum |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> It opened as the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on May 13, 1911, with the Native Flora Garden being the first established section.<ref name="nycparks">{{cite web|url=http://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/brooklynbotanicgarden/history|title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden History|website=NYC Parks|accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref>
[[Harold Caparn]] was appointed as the landscape architect in 1912. Caparn designed most of the rest of the grounds over the next three decades, including the Osborne Garden, Cranford Rose Garden, Magnolia Plaza, and Plant Collection.<ref name="tclf">{{cite web |url=http://tclf.org/pioneer/harold-caparn/biography-harold-caparn |title=Biography of Harold Caparn | website=The Cultural Landscape Foundation |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> Construction of the Laboratory Building and Conservatory began in 1912, and the building was dedicated in 1917.<ref name="nycparks" /> The building—now known as the [[Laboratory Administration Building]]—was designed in the [[Italianate architecture#Italianate style in the United States|Tuscan Revival]] style by William Kendall for [[McKim, Mead & White]], the architectural firm that built the Brooklyn Museum, [[Manhattan Municipal Building]], and many other prominent New York City buildings. It was designated a New York City Landmark in 2007.<ref name="nyclpc">{{cite web|url=http://s-media.nyc.gov/agencies/lpc/lp/2214.pdf|title=Laboratory Administration Building, Brooklyn Botanic Garden|date=March 13, 2007|publisher=[[New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission]]|access-date=September 30, 2019}}</ref>
The Garden began charging for admission in 1996, after cuts in state and federal funding and an increase in operating costs.<ref name="afeegrows">{{cite news |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/boroughs/fee-grows-brooklyn-botanic-garden-charge-admission-article-1.722031|author=Laura Williams|date=January 30, 1996|title=A Fee Grows in Brooklyn: Botanic Garden to Charge Admission|newspaper=Daily News|accessdate=April 9, 2017}}</ref>
In April 2019, after protests by local activists, a judge issued a temporary [[restraining order]] against a high rise development proposed by developer [[Isaac Hager]] which would cast shadows over the garden.<ref>{{Cite web|first= Lore |last=Croghan |authorlink= |title= Judge issues restraining order to halt development near Brooklyn Botanic Garden |publisher=[[Brooklyn Eagle]]|date=April 18, 2019 |url=https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2019/04/18/judge-issues-restraining-order-to-halt-development-near-brooklyn-botanic-garden/ |accessdate=}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|title=Isaac Hager takes Crown Heights rezoning off the table … for now developer to take second look at rezoning lots for 565 apartments |magazine=[[The Real Deal (magazine)|The Real Deal]]|date=April 20, 2017 |url=https://therealdeal.com/2017/04/20/isaac-hager-takes-crown-heights-rezoning-off-the-table-for-now/ }}</ref> The site next door to the proposed project, owned by Continuum Companies and Lincoln Equities, also being considered for development, is being fought by activists for the same reasons.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://therealdeal.com/2018/07/31/isaac-hager-sells-crown-heights-development-site-for-40m/|title=Isaac Hager {{!}} 40 Crown Street {{!}} Carmel Partners|date=2018-07-31|website=The Real Deal New York|language=en-US|access-date=2019-10-26}}</ref> The BBG is putting on an exhibition called "Fight for Sunlight" to bring more attention to the issue<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbg.org/visit/event/fight_for_sunlight_exhibit|title=Fight for Sunlight Exhibit|website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden|language=en|access-date=2019-10-26}}</ref> contending that unlike what developers say, its conservatories "would face catastrophic events."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.amny.com/news/brooklyn-botanic-garden-shadows-1.34466573|title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s ‘Fight for Sunlight’ protests Crown Heights building proposal|last=Brown|first=Nicole|date=July 31, 2019|work=AM New York|access-date=October 26, 2019}}</ref>
==Specialty gardens and collections==
[[File:Bbg cherry esplande.jpg|thumb|upright|right|250px|Cherry Esplanade]]
===Cherry trees===
The Garden has more than 200 [[cherry]] trees of forty-two [[Asia]]n species and cultivated varieties, making it one of the foremost cherry-viewing sites outside [[Japan]]. The first cherries were planted at the garden after World War I, a gift from the Japanese government. Each spring at BBG, when the trees are in bloom, a month-long cherry blossom viewing festival called ''[[Hanami]]'' is held at the Cherry Esplanade, culminating in a weekend celebration called ''Sakura Matsuri''. The Esplanade features two rows of cherry trees with trails and sitting areas on the side. Visitors may also sit on the field of grass between the rows of cherry trees. Cherry trees are found on the Cherry Esplanade and Cherry Walk, in the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden, and in many other locations in the Garden. Depending on weather conditions, the Asian flowering cherries bloom from late March or early April to mid-May. The many different species bloom at slightly different times, and the sequence is tracked online at Cherry Watch, on the BBG website.<ref name="CherryWatch">{{cite web |title=Cherry Blossoms at BBG – CherryWatch |publisher=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |url=http://www.bbg.org/collections/cherries}}</ref>
===Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden===
[[File:Bridge to Eden.jpg|thumb|Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden]]
BBG's Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden was the first [[Japanese garden]] to be created in an American public garden. It was constructed in 1914 and 1915 at a cost of $13,000, a gift of early BBG benefactor and trustee Alfred T. White, and it first opened to the public in June 1915. Widely considered by numerous landscape architects, to be the masterpiece of its creator, Japanese landscape designer [[Takeo Shiota]] (1881–1943). Shiota was born in a small Japanese village about {{convert|40|mi|km}} from [[Tokyo]], and in his youth spent years traversing Japan on foot to explore its [[natural landscape]]. He emigrated to the United States in 1907.
The garden is a blend of the ancient hill-and-pond style and the more modern stroll-garden style, in which various landscape features are gradually revealed along winding paths. Its {{convert|3|acre|ha}} contain hills, a waterfall, a pond, and an island, all artificially constructed. Carefully placed rocks also play leading roles. Among the architectural elements of the garden are wooden bridges, stone lanterns, a viewing pavilion, a ''[[torii]]'' or gateway, and a [[Shinto]] shrine. The pond is filled with hundreds of Japanese koi fish that visitors can enjoy viewing on the torii or along the trail of the garden. Another element that can be discovered walking through the trail is a Japanese temple dedicated to Inari, the fox kami. A restoration of the garden in 2000 was recognized with the New York Landmark Conservancy's 2001 Preservation Award.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}}
===Cranford Rose Garden===
[[File:Bbg Rosegarden.jpg|thumb|left|Cranford Rose Garden]]
In 1927, Walter V. Cranford, a construction engineer whose firm built many of Brooklyn's subway tunnels, donated $15,000 to BBG for a rose garden. Excavation revealed an old cobblestone road two feet below the surface and tons of glacial rock, which had to be carted away on horse-drawn barges.
The Cranford Rose Garden opened in June 1928. It was designed by Harold Caparn, a landscape architect, and Montague Free, the Garden's horticulturist. Many of the original plants are still in the garden today. There are over 5,000 bushes of nearly 1,400 kinds of [[rose]]s, including wild species, old garden roses, hybrid [[tea rose]]s, grandifloras, floribundas, polyanthas, hybrid perpetuals, climbers, ramblers, and miniature roses. The garden also features a stone statue.
===Native Flora Garden===
[[File:Tupelo Path.jpg|thumb|right|Native Flora Garden]]
[[File:Fall In the Native Flora Garden.jpg|thumb|right|Native Flora Garden Expansion]]
The Native Flora Garden was the first section of the garden to be established and opened in 1911.<ref name="nycparks"/> It was the first of its kind in North America. Originally a wildflower planting, it was redesigned in 1931 as a woodland habitat featuring plants native to the New York metropolitan area.<ref name="bbgnfg">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/discover/gardens/native_flora_garden#/tabs-2 |title=Native Flora Garden History |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=December 9, 2014}}</ref> The Native Flora Garden closed from 1963 to 1983 due to a lack of funding.
The Native Flora Garden was expanded in 2013 with a new landscape designed by Darrel Morrison. The expansion provides new habitats for local plants that would be shaded out by the mature canopy in the original two-acre garden. The expansion features a [[tallgrass prairie]], dry meadow, [[pine barrens]], [[Kettle (landform)|kettle pond]], and wooden bridge that allows visitors to cross over to the different habitats.<ref name="bbgnfgnews">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/news/native_flora_garden_expansion |title=Native Flora Garden Expansion |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=December 9, 2014}}</ref>
===Shakespeare Garden===
A donation from [[Henry Clay Folger]], founder of the [[Folger Shakespeare Library]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] paved the way for the construction of BBG's original Shakespeare Garden in 1925. Since moved to a different location in the Garden, this [[England|English]] [[cottage garden]] exhibits more than 80 plants mentioned in [[William Shakespeare]]'s plays and poems. Plant labels give the plants' common or Shakespearean names, their botanical names, relevant quotations, and, in some cases, a graphic representation of the plant.
===Alice Recknagel Ireys Fragrance Garden===
Next to the Shakespeare Garden is the Fragrance Garden, complete with [[braille]] information signs for visitors with vision disabilities. Created in 1955 by landscape architect [[Alice Recknagel Ireys]], this was the first garden in the country designed for the vision-impaired. All visitors are encouraged to rub the fragrant or pleasingly textured leaves of the plants between their fingers. There are four sections in the garden, each with a theme: (1) plants to touch, (2) plants with scented leaves, (3) plants with fragrant flowers, and (4) kitchen herbs. The garden is [[wheelchair-accessible]], and all planting beds are at an appropriate height for people in wheelchairs. A fountain provides a calming sound and a place to wash one's hands after touching the various plants.
===Children's Garden===
[[File:BBG Children's Garden.jpg|thumb|Children's Garden at Brooklyn Botanic Garden]]
The BBG Children's Garden is the oldest continually operating children's garden within a botanic garden in the world.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}} It was opened in 1914 under the direction of BBG educator Ellen Eddy Shaw and operates as a [[community garden]] for children, with hundreds of children registering each year for plots on the {{convert|1|acre|ha|adj=on}} site. This Children's Garden is also open for GAP interns who get an allocated plot in which they can grow all kinds of vegetables and flowers to harvest later on in the year. The Children's Garden also has a compost area which is maintained by the GAP interns and staff.
The BBG Children's Garden has served as a model for similar gardens around the world.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}}
=== Water Garden ===
A signature feature in the south Garden landscape, the new Shelby White and Leon Levy Water Garden is a 1.5-acre wetland and riparian environment with an integrated network of innovative sustainability features. The garden, designed by award-winning landscape architecture firm Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (MVVA), highlights the beauty of water elements at BBG with a restored and expanded pond and brook system and more than 20,000 new plants.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbg.org/collections/gardens//water_garden/|title=Water Garden - Brooklyn Botanic Garden|website=www.bbg.org|language=en|access-date=April 5, 2017}}</ref>
===Other gardens===
[[File:Peach Glow water-lily at Brooklyn Botanic Garden.jpg|thumb|left|A ''[[Nymphaea]]'' 'Peach Glow' water-lily in one of the lily pools]]
Other specialty gardens at BBG include: the Discovery Garden, designed for young children; the Herb Garden; the Lily Pool Terrace, which includes two large display pools of lilies and koi fish and surrounded by annual and perennial borders; the Osborne Garden, a {{convert|3|acre|ha|adj=on}}, Italian-style garden that features pergolas and a stone fountain, and the Rock Garden, built around 18 boulders left behind by the glacier during the [[Ice Age]]. A Celebrity Path honors famous Brooklynites past and present, such as [[Barbra Streisand]], [[Woody Allen]], and [[Walt Whitman]], with a trail of engraved paving stones. Following along that path leads to the Alfred T. White Amphitheater that hosts mini concerts and performances.
The '''Plant Family Collection''', which takes about a third of BBG's total area, includes plants and trees arranged by family to show their evolutionary progression from most primitive to most recently evolved. Although recent studies of plant genetics have changed classification of individual plants, the groupings are still an excellent introduction to the many different plant families and their constituent species. The groupings include primitive plants (ferns and conifers) and composite plants.
[[Image:BBGIndoor.JPG|thumb|Steinhardt Conservatory desert collection]]
[[File:BBG - Carissa macrocarpa var. Horizontalis - Cascade by Frank Okamura.jpg|thumb|Bonsaï ''Carissa macrocarpa'' var. Horizontalis - BBG]]
The '''Steinhardt Conservatory''' houses BBG's extensive indoor plant collection in three climate-controlled pavilions for tropical, warm temperate, and desert floras. Also located here are: the C.V. Starr Bonsai Museum, one of the oldest collections of dwarfed, potted trees in the country; an art gallery for changing art exhibitions; the Robert W. Wilson Aquatic House, with its collections of tropical water plants, insect-eating plants, and orchids; and the Stephen K-M. Tim Trail of Evolution, which traces the history of plant evolution and the effects of climate change over 3½ billion years.
The Garden also has an Overlook above the Cherry Esplanade that allows visitors to get a holistic view of the Cherry Esplanade and Garden. The Overlook is also a great place for bird watching or observing other wildlife at the Garden.
==Programs==
===Education programs===
[[File:Redwood bonsai.JPG|thumb|left|A [[bonsai]] [[Sequoia sempervirens|redwood]] in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Bonsai Museum]]
[[File:Greenery at Brooklyn Botanic Gardens IMG 0649.JPG|thumb|left|The [[Monocotyledon|Monocot Border]] in early July at Brooklyn Botanic Garden]]
Less apparent to the casual visitor are BBG's diverse programs in youth education, conservation, and community horticulture.
The Garden's Education department runs a full range of adult and children's classes and events, and also educates thousands of school and camp groups throughout the year.
Brooklyn Botanic Garden is a founding partner of the [[Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment]] (BASE), a small public high school dedicated to science, environmental studies, and urban ecology that was launched in 2003. A Field Studies course is offered adjunct Living Environment for incoming freshmen where students spend two hours out of one day in the week at BBG developing scientific skills and immersed in outdoor scientific study. The school is operated by a partnership between BBG, Prospect Park Alliance, and the [[New York City Department of Education]]. Students are also connected with scientists and horticulturists who serve as mentors for advanced research studies students develop. BASE graduated its first class in 2007 and has attained its fourth Gates Millennium Scholar in 2013.
BBG's Garden Apprentice Program (GAP) provides internships for students in grades 8 through 12 in gardening, science education, and environmental issues. The program offers students training and volunteer placements with increasing levels of responsibility for up to four years. Many interns are hired for employment after completing the four-year program.
The Discovery Garden hosts weekly hands-on workshops for kids of all ages. The Garden features many interactive exhibits along with a mini plot that has a variety of vegetables that kids can pick and enjoy the fresh treats available. The Garden is currently under construction for expansion.
[[Project Green Reach]] is a science-focused school outreach program which annually reaches nearly 2,500 students and teachers in public and nonpublic schools in underserved neighborhoods.
===Plant science and conservation===
Between 1990 and 2010, Scientists at Brooklyn Botanic Garden made a comprehensive study of the plants of metropolitan New York, called the New York Metropolitan Flora project, or NYMF. The purpose of NYMF is to catalog and describe all vascular plants growing in the region.
The BBG Herbarium collection comprises over 300,000 specimens of preserved plants, particularly plants from the New York metropolitan area. These specimens, some from as early as 1818, create a historical record and aid scientists in tracking species, analyzing the spread of invasive plants, and modeling changes in the metro region's vegetation. There are also holdings from the western United States, the Galapagos Islands, Bolivia, and Mauritius.
Housed in the McKim, Mead & White Administration Building, the BBG Library provides a collection of books on horticulture and botany that is available to home gardeners, professionals and staff. This building houses a Rare Book Room which holds valuable and historic botanical literature. This building also features classrooms, auditorium, a rotunda and offices.
===Community horticulture===
Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Community Greening program (formerly known as GreenBridge) shares BBG's knowledge and resources with Brooklyn neighborhoods by offering residential and commercial gardening programs to block associations, community gardens, community centers, and other groups.
The annual Greenest Block in Brooklyn contest encourages neighborhood beautification by offering classes in planting window boxes, planters, and tree pits and recognizing outstanding efforts.
The Urban Composting Project, supported by the [[New York City Department of Sanitation]], offers composting assistance and resources to community gardens and institutions and information on composting in residential backyards to individuals.
==Information==
===Garden publications===
BBG has been publishing books since 1945, when it launched its popular series of gardening handbooks. Today, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden '''Guides to a Greener Planet''' continue to provide home gardeners with practical information on garden design, sustainability, and native plants. BBG publications are distributed by [[Sterling Publishing]].<ref>[https://www.sterlingpublishing.com/imprints/ Imprints - Sterling Publishing]</ref> BBG's website features events, classes, and detailed information on its gardens and collections. Web editorial publications include the Garden News Blog and Gardening How-to Articles, and popular columns include Weed of the Month and Eat Local. New features are added every week. Other online resources include "ID Your Holiday Tree," "Cherry Watch," and "Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Guide to Rainwater Harvesting." <ref name=CherryWatch/> The website also includes the popular Plants in Bloom which is updated frequently and features current highlights from the collection. BBG's collection of historic photographs and lantern slides is also available online.
===Visitor information and gardening resources===
[[File:Brooklyn Botanic Garden 2.JPG|thumb|Osborne Garden]]
BBG has two gift shops, a Visitor Center,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/09/arts/design/a-new-visitor-center-at-brooklyn-botanic-garden.html|title=At Garden’s Visitor Center, a Welcome Transparency|date= May 8, 2012|author= Philip Noble|accessdate= December 23, 2012|work=The New York Times}}</ref> and a Gardener's Resource Center which provides reference services to home gardeners, staff, and the professional horticultural community. The Visitor Center and Gardener's Resource Center are both located in the [[McKim, Mead and White]] Administration Building.
A new Visitor Center at the BBG designed by [[Weiss/Manfredi]] opened on May 16, 2012.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbg.org/press/visitorcenter |title=BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN TO OPEN NEW VISITOR CENTER IN MAY 2012 - Brooklyn Botanic Garden |publisher=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |date=May 16, 2012 |accessdate=December 23, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archdaily.com/235079/brooklyn-botanic-garden-visitor-center-opens-to-the-public |title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public |publisher=ArchDaily |date=May 17, 2012 |accessdate=December 23, 2012}}</ref> The Center has a [[Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design]] (LEED) Gold certification for its sustainable and environmental features. The Center features a green roof, geothermal wells, [[rainwater harvesting]] and recycled wooden panel in its event space.
For those with paid memberships (starting at $65 for individual as of 2017), Brooklyn Botanic Garden offers a series of special incentives in the spring and summer season, including sunset picnic nights with special themes such as movies night and children's night.
The Palm House, a [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux Arts]]-style conservatory, is a wedding and events venue offering catering for up to 300 guests. Group tours are also available. Adjacent to the Palm House is the Terrace cafe that offers fresh, daily selections of meals and treats for visitors. During the winter month the cafe is relocated indoors at the lower level of the Steinhardt Conservatory.
BBG has about 165 full-time and 90 part-time employees along with 600 volunteers. Its annual operating budget is $16.2 million.
==Signs and plaques==
*The boundary line between the City of Brooklyn and the Township of Flatbush can be found in the park. The Brass Marker from 1934 describes the spot and reads "This brass line in the walk shows the boundary between the old City of Brooklyn and the Township of Flatbush."
*Sandstone Boulder plaque reads, "Boulder of sandstone geological age, Triassic. Transported by continental glacier during the ice age from near Paterson NJ."
*Diabase Boulder plaque reads, "Boulder of Diabase geological age, Triassic. Transported by continental glacier during the ice age from near Haverstraw, NY."
*At the entrance to the park is a sign, "This gate and booth are due to a bequest of [[Sidney Maddock]], 1937"
*In the Japanese garden there is a stone lantern plaque which reads "This Japanese lantern was presented to the city of New York by Mr. Bunj Sakuma a controller of Taito Ward Tokyo, in October 1980, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the New York-Tokyo sister city affiliation. In 1652, feudal lord Naito Bunzen-no Kami Nobuteru dedicated this 10 foot high, 3 ton, komatsu stone lantern to the Tokugawa shogunate."
*The Liberty Oaks Memorial is a line of oak trees and a [[List of 9/11 memorials|9/11 memorial]]. The boulder at the start of the line reads - "In Remembrance Of The Events Of September 11, 2001 And To Those Who Lost Their Lives That Day. The Norway Maples That Grew As The First Generation Of Trees On This Site Were Planted In November 1918 To Commemorate The WW1 Armistice."
== See also ==
* [[List of botanical gardens in the United States]]
* [[List of museums and cultural institutions in New York City]]
== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}
== External links ==
{{commons|Brooklyn Botanic Garden|Brooklyn Botanic Garden}}
* [http://www.bbg.org/ Brooklyn Botanic Garden website]
* [http://www.bbg.org/cgi/hic/hic_search.cgi BBG Historic Image Collection] (many images are in [[public domain]])
* [https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/partner/brooklyn-botanic-garden Brooklyn Botanic Garden at Google Cultural Institute]
* [https://www.bbg.org/visit/event/fight_for_sunlight_exhibit The BBG's Fight for Sunlight exhibition]
{{Protected areas of New York City}}
[[Category:Botanical gardens in New York City]]
[[Category:Japanese-American culture in New York City]]
[[Category:Japanese gardens in the United States]]
[[Category:Prospect Park (Brooklyn)]]
[[Category:Museums in Brooklyn]]
[[Category:Art galleries in Brooklyn]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | '{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2018}}
{{Infobox zoo
|zoo_name = Brooklyn Botanic Garden
|logo = Brooklyn Botanic Garden (logo).png
|logo_width = 200px
|logo_caption = Current logo
|image = Brooklyn_botanic_garden_fragrance_garden_gate.jpg
|image_caption= Brooklyn Botanic Garden
|date_opened = Founded in 1910
|location = 990 Washington Avenue, within [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]], [[Brooklyn]], [[New York (state)|New York]] 11225<br>[[United States]]
|coordinates = {{coord|40|40|7.32|N|73|57|52.92|W|type:landmark_scale:2500|display=inline,title}}
|area = {{convert|52|acre|ha}}
|num_species = 12,000<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.bbg.org/research/plant_collection | title=BBG's Plant Collection}}</ref>
|annual_visitors= 725,000<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.bbg.org/press/capital_campaign | title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden Announces $7.5M Leon Levy Foundation Gift}}</ref>
|publictransit = '''[[New York City Subway]]:'''{{bulleted list|{{NYCS Franklin-Botanic|time=bullets}} at [[Franklin Avenue/Botanic Garden (New York City Subway)|Franklin Avenue/Botanic Garden]]|{{NYCS Prospect Park|time=bullets}} at [[Prospect Park (BMT lines)|Prospect Park]]}}'''[[New York City Bus]]:''' {{NYC bus link|B41|B48}}
|website = http://www.bbg.org/
}}
'''Brooklyn Botanic Garden''' ('''BBG''') is a [[botanical garden]] in the [[Borough (New York City)|borough]] of [[Brooklyn]] in [[New York City]]. Founded in 1910 and located in [[Mount Prospect Park]], next to [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]] and the [[Brooklyn Museum]], the {{convert|52|acre|ha|adj=on}} garden includes a number of specialty "gardens within the Garden", plant collections and the Steinhardt Conservatory, which houses the [[C. V. Starr]] Bonsai Museum, three climate-themed plant pavilions, a white [[cast iron|cast-iron]] and glass [[aquatic plant]] house, and an [[art gallery]]. The Garden holds over 14,000 taxa of plants and each year has over 900,000 visitors.
jinhunhui
==Specialty gardens and collections==
[[File:Bbg cherry esplande.jpg|thumb|upright|right|250px|Cherry Esplanade]]
===Cherry trees===
The Garden has more than 200 [[cherry]] trees of forty-two [[Asia]]n species and cultivated varieties, making it one of the foremost cherry-viewing sites outside [[Japan]]. The first cherries were planted at the garden after World War I, a gift from the Japanese government. Each spring at BBG, when the trees are in bloom, a month-long cherry blossom viewing festival called ''[[Hanami]]'' is held at the Cherry Esplanade, culminating in a weekend celebration called ''Sakura Matsuri''. The Esplanade features two rows of cherry trees with trails and sitting areas on the side. Visitors may also sit on the field of grass between the rows of cherry trees. Cherry trees are found on the Cherry Esplanade and Cherry Walk, in the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden, and in many other locations in the Garden. Depending on weather conditions, the Asian flowering cherries bloom from late March or early April to mid-May. The many different species bloom at slightly different times, and the sequence is tracked online at Cherry Watch, on the BBG website.<ref name="CherryWatch">{{cite web |title=Cherry Blossoms at BBG – CherryWatch |publisher=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |url=http://www.bbg.org/collections/cherries}}</ref>
===Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden===
[[File:Bridge to Eden.jpg|thumb|Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden]]
BBG's Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden was the first [[Japanese garden]] to be created in an American public garden. It was constructed in 1914 and 1915 at a cost of $13,000, a gift of early BBG benefactor and trustee Alfred T. White, and it first opened to the public in June 1915. Widely considered by numerous landscape architects, to be the masterpiece of its creator, Japanese landscape designer [[Takeo Shiota]] (1881–1943). Shiota was born in a small Japanese village about {{convert|40|mi|km}} from [[Tokyo]], and in his youth spent years traversing Japan on foot to explore its [[natural landscape]]. He emigrated to the United States in 1907.
The garden is a blend of the ancient hill-and-pond style and the more modern stroll-garden style, in which various landscape features are gradually revealed along winding paths. Its {{convert|3|acre|ha}} contain hills, a waterfall, a pond, and an island, all artificially constructed. Carefully placed rocks also play leading roles. Among the architectural elements of the garden are wooden bridges, stone lanterns, a viewing pavilion, a ''[[torii]]'' or gateway, and a [[Shinto]] shrine. The pond is filled with hundreds of Japanese koi fish that visitors can enjoy viewing on the torii or along the trail of the garden. Another element that can be discovered walking through the trail is a Japanese temple dedicated to Inari, the fox kami. A restoration of the garden in 2000 was recognized with the New York Landmark Conservancy's 2001 Preservation Award.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}}
===Cranford Rose Garden===
[[File:Bbg Rosegarden.jpg|thumb|left|Cranford Rose Garden]]
In 1927, Walter V. Cranford, a construction engineer whose firm built many of Brooklyn's subway tunnels, donated $15,000 to BBG for a rose garden. Excavation revealed an old cobblestone road two feet below the surface and tons of glacial rock, which had to be carted away on horse-drawn barges.
The Cranford Rose Garden opened in June 1928. It was designed by Harold Caparn, a landscape architect, and Montague Free, the Garden's horticulturist. Many of the original plants are still in the garden today. There are over 5,000 bushes of nearly 1,400 kinds of [[rose]]s, including wild species, old garden roses, hybrid [[tea rose]]s, grandifloras, floribundas, polyanthas, hybrid perpetuals, climbers, ramblers, and miniature roses. The garden also features a stone statue.
===Native Flora Garden===
[[File:Tupelo Path.jpg|thumb|right|Native Flora Garden]]
[[File:Fall In the Native Flora Garden.jpg|thumb|right|Native Flora Garden Expansion]]
The Native Flora Garden was the first section of the garden to be established and opened in 1911.<ref name="nycparks"/> It was the first of its kind in North America. Originally a wildflower planting, it was redesigned in 1931 as a woodland habitat featuring plants native to the New York metropolitan area.<ref name="bbgnfg">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/discover/gardens/native_flora_garden#/tabs-2 |title=Native Flora Garden History |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=December 9, 2014}}</ref> The Native Flora Garden closed from 1963 to 1983 due to a lack of funding.
The Native Flora Garden was expanded in 2013 with a new landscape designed by Darrel Morrison. The expansion provides new habitats for local plants that would be shaded out by the mature canopy in the original two-acre garden. The expansion features a [[tallgrass prairie]], dry meadow, [[pine barrens]], [[Kettle (landform)|kettle pond]], and wooden bridge that allows visitors to cross over to the different habitats.<ref name="bbgnfgnews">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/news/native_flora_garden_expansion |title=Native Flora Garden Expansion |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=December 9, 2014}}</ref>
===Shakespeare Garden===
A donation from [[Henry Clay Folger]], founder of the [[Folger Shakespeare Library]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] paved the way for the construction of BBG's original Shakespeare Garden in 1925. Since moved to a different location in the Garden, this [[England|English]] [[cottage garden]] exhibits more than 80 plants mentioned in [[William Shakespeare]]'s plays and poems. Plant labels give the plants' common or Shakespearean names, their botanical names, relevant quotations, and, in some cases, a graphic representation of the plant.
===Alice Recknagel Ireys Fragrance Garden===
Next to the Shakespeare Garden is the Fragrance Garden, complete with [[braille]] information signs for visitors with vision disabilities. Created in 1955 by landscape architect [[Alice Recknagel Ireys]], this was the first garden in the country designed for the vision-impaired. All visitors are encouraged to rub the fragrant or pleasingly textured leaves of the plants between their fingers. There are four sections in the garden, each with a theme: (1) plants to touch, (2) plants with scented leaves, (3) plants with fragrant flowers, and (4) kitchen herbs. The garden is [[wheelchair-accessible]], and all planting beds are at an appropriate height for people in wheelchairs. A fountain provides a calming sound and a place to wash one's hands after touching the various plants.
===Children's Garden===
[[File:BBG Children's Garden.jpg|thumb|Children's Garden at Brooklyn Botanic Garden]]
The BBG Children's Garden is the oldest continually operating children's garden within a botanic garden in the world.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}} It was opened in 1914 under the direction of BBG educator Ellen Eddy Shaw and operates as a [[community garden]] for children, with hundreds of children registering each year for plots on the {{convert|1|acre|ha|adj=on}} site. This Children's Garden is also open for GAP interns who get an allocated plot in which they can grow all kinds of vegetables and flowers to harvest later on in the year. The Children's Garden also has a compost area which is maintained by the GAP interns and staff.
The BBG Children's Garden has served as a model for similar gardens around the world.{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}}
=== Water Garden ===
A signature feature in the south Garden landscape, the new Shelby White and Leon Levy Water Garden is a 1.5-acre wetland and riparian environment with an integrated network of innovative sustainability features. The garden, designed by award-winning landscape architecture firm Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (MVVA), highlights the beauty of water elements at BBG with a restored and expanded pond and brook system and more than 20,000 new plants.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbg.org/collections/gardens//water_garden/|title=Water Garden - Brooklyn Botanic Garden|website=www.bbg.org|language=en|access-date=April 5, 2017}}</ref>
===Other gardens===
[[File:Peach Glow water-lily at Brooklyn Botanic Garden.jpg|thumb|left|A ''[[Nymphaea]]'' 'Peach Glow' water-lily in one of the lily pools]]
Other specialty gardens at BBG include: the Discovery Garden, designed for young children; the Herb Garden; the Lily Pool Terrace, which includes two large display pools of lilies and koi fish and surrounded by annual and perennial borders; the Osborne Garden, a {{convert|3|acre|ha|adj=on}}, Italian-style garden that features pergolas and a stone fountain, and the Rock Garden, built around 18 boulders left behind by the glacier during the [[Ice Age]]. A Celebrity Path honors famous Brooklynites past and present, such as [[Barbra Streisand]], [[Woody Allen]], and [[Walt Whitman]], with a trail of engraved paving stones. Following along that path leads to the Alfred T. White Amphitheater that hosts mini concerts and performances.
The '''Plant Family Collection''', which takes about a third of BBG's total area, includes plants and trees arranged by family to show their evolutionary progression from most primitive to most recently evolved. Although recent studies of plant genetics have changed classification of individual plants, the groupings are still an excellent introduction to the many different plant families and their constituent species. The groupings include primitive plants (ferns and conifers) and composite plants.
[[Image:BBGIndoor.JPG|thumb|Steinhardt Conservatory desert collection]]
[[File:BBG - Carissa macrocarpa var. Horizontalis - Cascade by Frank Okamura.jpg|thumb|Bonsaï ''Carissa macrocarpa'' var. Horizontalis - BBG]]
The '''Steinhardt Conservatory''' houses BBG's extensive indoor plant collection in three climate-controlled pavilions for tropical, warm temperate, and desert floras. Also located here are: the C.V. Starr Bonsai Museum, one of the oldest collections of dwarfed, potted trees in the country; an art gallery for changing art exhibitions; the Robert W. Wilson Aquatic House, with its collections of tropical water plants, insect-eating plants, and orchids; and the Stephen K-M. Tim Trail of Evolution, which traces the history of plant evolution and the effects of climate change over 3½ billion years.
The Garden also has an Overlook above the Cherry Esplanade that allows visitors to get a holistic view of the Cherry Esplanade and Garden. The Overlook is also a great place for bird watching or observing other wildlife at the Garden.
==Programs==
===Education programs===
[[File:Redwood bonsai.JPG|thumb|left|A [[bonsai]] [[Sequoia sempervirens|redwood]] in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Bonsai Museum]]
[[File:Greenery at Brooklyn Botanic Gardens IMG 0649.JPG|thumb|left|The [[Monocotyledon|Monocot Border]] in early July at Brooklyn Botanic Garden]]
Less apparent to the casual visitor are BBG's diverse programs in youth education, conservation, and community horticulture.
The Garden's Education department runs a full range of adult and children's classes and events, and also educates thousands of school and camp groups throughout the year.
Brooklyn Botanic Garden is a founding partner of the [[Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment]] (BASE), a small public high school dedicated to science, environmental studies, and urban ecology that was launched in 2003. A Field Studies course is offered adjunct Living Environment for incoming freshmen where students spend two hours out of one day in the week at BBG developing scientific skills and immersed in outdoor scientific study. The school is operated by a partnership between BBG, Prospect Park Alliance, and the [[New York City Department of Education]]. Students are also connected with scientists and horticulturists who serve as mentors for advanced research studies students develop. BASE graduated its first class in 2007 and has attained its fourth Gates Millennium Scholar in 2013.
BBG's Garden Apprentice Program (GAP) provides internships for students in grades 8 through 12 in gardening, science education, and environmental issues. The program offers students training and volunteer placements with increasing levels of responsibility for up to four years. Many interns are hired for employment after completing the four-year program.
The Discovery Garden hosts weekly hands-on workshops for kids of all ages. The Garden features many interactive exhibits along with a mini plot that has a variety of vegetables that kids can pick and enjoy the fresh treats available. The Garden is currently under construction for expansion.
[[Project Green Reach]] is a science-focused school outreach program which annually reaches nearly 2,500 students and teachers in public and nonpublic schools in underserved neighborhoods.
===Plant science and conservation===
Between 1990 and 2010, Scientists at Brooklyn Botanic Garden made a comprehensive study of the plants of metropolitan New York, called the New York Metropolitan Flora project, or NYMF. The purpose of NYMF is to catalog and describe all vascular plants growing in the region.
The BBG Herbarium collection comprises over 300,000 specimens of preserved plants, particularly plants from the New York metropolitan area. These specimens, some from as early as 1818, create a historical record and aid scientists in tracking species, analyzing the spread of invasive plants, and modeling changes in the metro region's vegetation. There are also holdings from the western United States, the Galapagos Islands, Bolivia, and Mauritius.
Housed in the McKim, Mead & White Administration Building, the BBG Library provides a collection of books on horticulture and botany that is available to home gardeners, professionals and staff. This building houses a Rare Book Room which holds valuable and historic botanical literature. This building also features classrooms, auditorium, a rotunda and offices.
===Community horticulture===
Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Community Greening program (formerly known as GreenBridge) shares BBG's knowledge and resources with Brooklyn neighborhoods by offering residential and commercial gardening programs to block associations, community gardens, community centers, and other groups.
The annual Greenest Block in Brooklyn contest encourages neighborhood beautification by offering classes in planting window boxes, planters, and tree pits and recognizing outstanding efforts.
The Urban Composting Project, supported by the [[New York City Department of Sanitation]], offers composting assistance and resources to community gardens and institutions and information on composting in residential backyards to individuals.
==Information==
===Garden publications===
BBG has been publishing books since 1945, when it launched its popular series of gardening handbooks. Today, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden '''Guides to a Greener Planet''' continue to provide home gardeners with practical information on garden design, sustainability, and native plants. BBG publications are distributed by [[Sterling Publishing]].<ref>[https://www.sterlingpublishing.com/imprints/ Imprints - Sterling Publishing]</ref> BBG's website features events, classes, and detailed information on its gardens and collections. Web editorial publications include the Garden News Blog and Gardening How-to Articles, and popular columns include Weed of the Month and Eat Local. New features are added every week. Other online resources include "ID Your Holiday Tree," "Cherry Watch," and "Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Guide to Rainwater Harvesting." <ref name=CherryWatch/> The website also includes the popular Plants in Bloom which is updated frequently and features current highlights from the collection. BBG's collection of historic photographs and lantern slides is also available online.
===Visitor information and gardening resources===
[[File:Brooklyn Botanic Garden 2.JPG|thumb|Osborne Garden]]
BBG has two gift shops, a Visitor Center,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/09/arts/design/a-new-visitor-center-at-brooklyn-botanic-garden.html|title=At Garden’s Visitor Center, a Welcome Transparency|date= May 8, 2012|author= Philip Noble|accessdate= December 23, 2012|work=The New York Times}}</ref> and a Gardener's Resource Center which provides reference services to home gardeners, staff, and the professional horticultural community. The Visitor Center and Gardener's Resource Center are both located in the [[McKim, Mead and White]] Administration Building.
A new Visitor Center at the BBG designed by [[Weiss/Manfredi]] opened on May 16, 2012.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbg.org/press/visitorcenter |title=BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN TO OPEN NEW VISITOR CENTER IN MAY 2012 - Brooklyn Botanic Garden |publisher=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |date=May 16, 2012 |accessdate=December 23, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archdaily.com/235079/brooklyn-botanic-garden-visitor-center-opens-to-the-public |title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitor Center Opens to the Public |publisher=ArchDaily |date=May 17, 2012 |accessdate=December 23, 2012}}</ref> The Center has a [[Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design]] (LEED) Gold certification for its sustainable and environmental features. The Center features a green roof, geothermal wells, [[rainwater harvesting]] and recycled wooden panel in its event space.
For those with paid memberships (starting at $65 for individual as of 2017), Brooklyn Botanic Garden offers a series of special incentives in the spring and summer season, including sunset picnic nights with special themes such as movies night and children's night.
The Palm House, a [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux Arts]]-style conservatory, is a wedding and events venue offering catering for up to 300 guests. Group tours are also available. Adjacent to the Palm House is the Terrace cafe that offers fresh, daily selections of meals and treats for visitors. During the winter month the cafe is relocated indoors at the lower level of the Steinhardt Conservatory.
BBG has about 165 full-time and 90 part-time employees along with 600 volunteers. Its annual operating budget is $16.2 million.
==Signs and plaques==
*The boundary line between the City of Brooklyn and the Township of Flatbush can be found in the park. The Brass Marker from 1934 describes the spot and reads "This brass line in the walk shows the boundary between the old City of Brooklyn and the Township of Flatbush."
*Sandstone Boulder plaque reads, "Boulder of sandstone geological age, Triassic. Transported by continental glacier during the ice age from near Paterson NJ."
*Diabase Boulder plaque reads, "Boulder of Diabase geological age, Triassic. Transported by continental glacier during the ice age from near Haverstraw, NY."
*At the entrance to the park is a sign, "This gate and booth are due to a bequest of [[Sidney Maddock]], 1937"
*In the Japanese garden there is a stone lantern plaque which reads "This Japanese lantern was presented to the city of New York by Mr. Bunj Sakuma a controller of Taito Ward Tokyo, in October 1980, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the New York-Tokyo sister city affiliation. In 1652, feudal lord Naito Bunzen-no Kami Nobuteru dedicated this 10 foot high, 3 ton, komatsu stone lantern to the Tokugawa shogunate."
*The Liberty Oaks Memorial is a line of oak trees and a [[List of 9/11 memorials|9/11 memorial]]. The boulder at the start of the line reads - "In Remembrance Of The Events Of September 11, 2001 And To Those Who Lost Their Lives That Day. The Norway Maples That Grew As The First Generation Of Trees On This Site Were Planted In November 1918 To Commemorate The WW1 Armistice."
== See also ==
* [[List of botanical gardens in the United States]]
* [[List of museums and cultural institutions in New York City]]
== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}
== External links ==
{{commons|Brooklyn Botanic Garden|Brooklyn Botanic Garden}}
* [http://www.bbg.org/ Brooklyn Botanic Garden website]
* [http://www.bbg.org/cgi/hic/hic_search.cgi BBG Historic Image Collection] (many images are in [[public domain]])
* [https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/partner/brooklyn-botanic-garden Brooklyn Botanic Garden at Google Cultural Institute]
* [https://www.bbg.org/visit/event/fight_for_sunlight_exhibit The BBG's Fight for Sunlight exhibition]
{{Protected areas of New York City}}
[[Category:Botanical gardens in New York City]]
[[Category:Japanese-American culture in New York City]]
[[Category:Japanese gardens in the United States]]
[[Category:Prospect Park (Brooklyn)]]
[[Category:Museums in Brooklyn]]
[[Category:Art galleries in Brooklyn]]' |
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff ) | '@@ -18,14 +18,5 @@
'''Brooklyn Botanic Garden''' ('''BBG''') is a [[botanical garden]] in the [[Borough (New York City)|borough]] of [[Brooklyn]] in [[New York City]]. Founded in 1910 and located in [[Mount Prospect Park]], next to [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]] and the [[Brooklyn Museum]], the {{convert|52|acre|ha|adj=on}} garden includes a number of specialty "gardens within the Garden", plant collections and the Steinhardt Conservatory, which houses the [[C. V. Starr]] Bonsai Museum, three climate-themed plant pavilions, a white [[cast iron|cast-iron]] and glass [[aquatic plant]] house, and an [[art gallery]]. The Garden holds over 14,000 taxa of plants and each year has over 900,000 visitors.
-==History==
-The original impetus to build [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]] stemmed from an April 18, 1859, act of the New York State Legislature, empowering a twelve-member commission to recommend sites for parks in the [[City of Brooklyn]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BBYZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1|title=Laws Relating to the Public Parks, Parkways, and Other Property Under the Care and Control of the Brooklyn Park Commissioners|last=Anderson|first=J.A.|year=1887|page=1|access-date=January 20, 2019}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite news|url=https://bklyn.newspapers.com/clip/3137046/|title=Public Parks and Promenades|date=May 29, 1860|work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle|access-date=January 19, 2019|page=2|via=Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com}} {{open access}}</ref> In February 1860, a group of fifteen commissioners submitted suggestions for park locations in Brooklyn, including a {{convert|320|acre|km2|adj=on}} plot centered on present-day [[Mount Prospect Park]] and bounded by Warren Street to the north; Vanderbilt, Ninth, and Tenth Avenues to the west; Third and Ninth Streets to the south; and Washington Avenue to the east.<ref name="Lancaster">{{cite book|url=https://www.echonyc.com/~parks/books/handbook.html|title=Prospect Park Handbook|last=Lancaster|first=Clay|publisher=Long Island University Press|year=1972|isbn=978-0-913252-06-2|edition=2nd|location=New York|pages=}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://bklyn.newspapers.com/clip/27409545/|title=Prospect Park|date=May 19, 1861|work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle|access-date=January 19, 2019|page=2|via=Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com}} {{open access}}</ref> [[Egbert Viele]] began drawing plans for the park, which was to straddle Flatbush Avenue and include Prospect Hill, as well as the land now occupied by the [[Central Library (Brooklyn Public Library)|Brooklyn Public Library]], Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and [[Brooklyn Museum]].<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name=":9">{{cite journal|last=Bluestone|first=Daniel M.|year=1987|title=From Promenade to Park: The Gregarious Origins of Brooklyn's Park Movement|journal=American Quarterly|publisher=JSTOR|volume=39|issue=4|pages=529–550|doi=10.2307/2713123|issn=0003-0678|jstor=2713123}}</ref> The onset of the [[American Civil War|Civil War]] stopped further activity.<ref name=":9" /> [[Calvert Vaux]] was hired to review Viele's plans early in 1865.<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name="PPAHistory">{{cite web|url=https://www.prospectpark.org/learn-more/park-history-slideshow/|title=History and Nature: History of the Park|year=2007|publisher=Prospect Park Alliance|accessdate=November 23, 2007}}</ref> Vaux took issue with Flatbush Avenue's division of the park, among other things.<ref name="PPGuide">{{cite book|title=The Complete Illustrated Guidebook to Prospect Park and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden|last=Berenson|first=Richard J.|author2=deMause, Neil|publisher=Silver Lining Books|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7607-2213-8|location=New York|pages=|authorlink2=Neil deMause}}</ref>{{Rp|86–91}} Vaux's February 1865 proposal excluded parcels already purchased east of Flatbush Avenue, including Prospect Hill itself.<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name=":5">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1868/12/15/archives/prospect-park-progress-of-the-workdescriptive-particulars.html|title=Prospect Park; Progress of the Work—Descriptive Particulars.|date=December 15, 1868|work=The New York Times|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331|access-date=January 28, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/stream/annualreportsofb1873broo/annualreportsofb1873broo_djvu.txt|title=Annual reports of the Brooklyn Park Commissioners, 1861–1873|last=|first=|date=1873|publisher=Brooklyn Park Commissioners|isbn=|location=|page=127|access-date=January 28, 2019|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> The northeast portion went unused, serving as an ash dump.
-
-Legislation in 1897 as the city moved [[History of New York City|toward consolidation]] reserved 39 acres (16 ha) for a botanic garden, and the garden itself was founded in 1910.<ref name="bbg">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/about/history |title=A Brief History of BBG |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> The garden was initially known as the Institute Park. It was run under the auspices of the [[Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences]], which included (until the 1970s) the [[Brooklyn Museum]], [[Brooklyn Children's Museum]], and [[Brooklyn Academy of Music]].<ref name="bm">{{cite web |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/about/building.php |title=About the Brooklyn Museum's Building | website=Brooklyn Museum |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> It opened as the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on May 13, 1911, with the Native Flora Garden being the first established section.<ref name="nycparks">{{cite web|url=http://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/brooklynbotanicgarden/history|title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden History|website=NYC Parks|accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref>
-
-[[Harold Caparn]] was appointed as the landscape architect in 1912. Caparn designed most of the rest of the grounds over the next three decades, including the Osborne Garden, Cranford Rose Garden, Magnolia Plaza, and Plant Collection.<ref name="tclf">{{cite web |url=http://tclf.org/pioneer/harold-caparn/biography-harold-caparn |title=Biography of Harold Caparn | website=The Cultural Landscape Foundation |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> Construction of the Laboratory Building and Conservatory began in 1912, and the building was dedicated in 1917.<ref name="nycparks" /> The building—now known as the [[Laboratory Administration Building]]—was designed in the [[Italianate architecture#Italianate style in the United States|Tuscan Revival]] style by William Kendall for [[McKim, Mead & White]], the architectural firm that built the Brooklyn Museum, [[Manhattan Municipal Building]], and many other prominent New York City buildings. It was designated a New York City Landmark in 2007.<ref name="nyclpc">{{cite web|url=http://s-media.nyc.gov/agencies/lpc/lp/2214.pdf|title=Laboratory Administration Building, Brooklyn Botanic Garden|date=March 13, 2007|publisher=[[New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission]]|access-date=September 30, 2019}}</ref>
-
-The Garden began charging for admission in 1996, after cuts in state and federal funding and an increase in operating costs.<ref name="afeegrows">{{cite news |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/boroughs/fee-grows-brooklyn-botanic-garden-charge-admission-article-1.722031|author=Laura Williams|date=January 30, 1996|title=A Fee Grows in Brooklyn: Botanic Garden to Charge Admission|newspaper=Daily News|accessdate=April 9, 2017}}</ref>
-
-In April 2019, after protests by local activists, a judge issued a temporary [[restraining order]] against a high rise development proposed by developer [[Isaac Hager]] which would cast shadows over the garden.<ref>{{Cite web|first= Lore |last=Croghan |authorlink= |title= Judge issues restraining order to halt development near Brooklyn Botanic Garden |publisher=[[Brooklyn Eagle]]|date=April 18, 2019 |url=https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2019/04/18/judge-issues-restraining-order-to-halt-development-near-brooklyn-botanic-garden/ |accessdate=}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|title=Isaac Hager takes Crown Heights rezoning off the table … for now developer to take second look at rezoning lots for 565 apartments |magazine=[[The Real Deal (magazine)|The Real Deal]]|date=April 20, 2017 |url=https://therealdeal.com/2017/04/20/isaac-hager-takes-crown-heights-rezoning-off-the-table-for-now/ }}</ref> The site next door to the proposed project, owned by Continuum Companies and Lincoln Equities, also being considered for development, is being fought by activists for the same reasons.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://therealdeal.com/2018/07/31/isaac-hager-sells-crown-heights-development-site-for-40m/|title=Isaac Hager {{!}} 40 Crown Street {{!}} Carmel Partners|date=2018-07-31|website=The Real Deal New York|language=en-US|access-date=2019-10-26}}</ref> The BBG is putting on an exhibition called "Fight for Sunlight" to bring more attention to the issue<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbg.org/visit/event/fight_for_sunlight_exhibit|title=Fight for Sunlight Exhibit|website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden|language=en|access-date=2019-10-26}}</ref> contending that unlike what developers say, its conservatories "would face catastrophic events."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.amny.com/news/brooklyn-botanic-garden-shadows-1.34466573|title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s ‘Fight for Sunlight’ protests Crown Heights building proposal|last=Brown|first=Nicole|date=July 31, 2019|work=AM New York|access-date=October 26, 2019}}</ref>
+jinhunhui
==Specialty gardens and collections==
' |
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0 => '==History==',
1 => 'The original impetus to build [[Prospect Park (Brooklyn)|Prospect Park]] stemmed from an April 18, 1859, act of the New York State Legislature, empowering a twelve-member commission to recommend sites for parks in the [[City of Brooklyn]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BBYZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1|title=Laws Relating to the Public Parks, Parkways, and Other Property Under the Care and Control of the Brooklyn Park Commissioners|last=Anderson|first=J.A.|year=1887|page=1|access-date=January 20, 2019}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite news|url=https://bklyn.newspapers.com/clip/3137046/|title=Public Parks and Promenades|date=May 29, 1860|work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle|access-date=January 19, 2019|page=2|via=Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com}} {{open access}}</ref> In February 1860, a group of fifteen commissioners submitted suggestions for park locations in Brooklyn, including a {{convert|320|acre|km2|adj=on}} plot centered on present-day [[Mount Prospect Park]] and bounded by Warren Street to the north; Vanderbilt, Ninth, and Tenth Avenues to the west; Third and Ninth Streets to the south; and Washington Avenue to the east.<ref name="Lancaster">{{cite book|url=https://www.echonyc.com/~parks/books/handbook.html|title=Prospect Park Handbook|last=Lancaster|first=Clay|publisher=Long Island University Press|year=1972|isbn=978-0-913252-06-2|edition=2nd|location=New York|pages=}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://bklyn.newspapers.com/clip/27409545/|title=Prospect Park|date=May 19, 1861|work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle|access-date=January 19, 2019|page=2|via=Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com}} {{open access}}</ref> [[Egbert Viele]] began drawing plans for the park, which was to straddle Flatbush Avenue and include Prospect Hill, as well as the land now occupied by the [[Central Library (Brooklyn Public Library)|Brooklyn Public Library]], Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and [[Brooklyn Museum]].<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name=":9">{{cite journal|last=Bluestone|first=Daniel M.|year=1987|title=From Promenade to Park: The Gregarious Origins of Brooklyn's Park Movement|journal=American Quarterly|publisher=JSTOR|volume=39|issue=4|pages=529–550|doi=10.2307/2713123|issn=0003-0678|jstor=2713123}}</ref> The onset of the [[American Civil War|Civil War]] stopped further activity.<ref name=":9" /> [[Calvert Vaux]] was hired to review Viele's plans early in 1865.<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name="PPAHistory">{{cite web|url=https://www.prospectpark.org/learn-more/park-history-slideshow/|title=History and Nature: History of the Park|year=2007|publisher=Prospect Park Alliance|accessdate=November 23, 2007}}</ref> Vaux took issue with Flatbush Avenue's division of the park, among other things.<ref name="PPGuide">{{cite book|title=The Complete Illustrated Guidebook to Prospect Park and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden|last=Berenson|first=Richard J.|author2=deMause, Neil|publisher=Silver Lining Books|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7607-2213-8|location=New York|pages=|authorlink2=Neil deMause}}</ref>{{Rp|86–91}} Vaux's February 1865 proposal excluded parcels already purchased east of Flatbush Avenue, including Prospect Hill itself.<ref name="Lancaster" /><ref name=":5">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1868/12/15/archives/prospect-park-progress-of-the-workdescriptive-particulars.html|title=Prospect Park; Progress of the Work—Descriptive Particulars.|date=December 15, 1868|work=The New York Times|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331|access-date=January 28, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/stream/annualreportsofb1873broo/annualreportsofb1873broo_djvu.txt|title=Annual reports of the Brooklyn Park Commissioners, 1861–1873|last=|first=|date=1873|publisher=Brooklyn Park Commissioners|isbn=|location=|page=127|access-date=January 28, 2019|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> The northeast portion went unused, serving as an ash dump. ',
2 => '',
3 => 'Legislation in 1897 as the city moved [[History of New York City|toward consolidation]] reserved 39 acres (16 ha) for a botanic garden, and the garden itself was founded in 1910.<ref name="bbg">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbg.org/about/history |title=A Brief History of BBG |website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> The garden was initially known as the Institute Park. It was run under the auspices of the [[Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences]], which included (until the 1970s) the [[Brooklyn Museum]], [[Brooklyn Children's Museum]], and [[Brooklyn Academy of Music]].<ref name="bm">{{cite web |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/about/building.php |title=About the Brooklyn Museum's Building | website=Brooklyn Museum |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> It opened as the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on May 13, 1911, with the Native Flora Garden being the first established section.<ref name="nycparks">{{cite web|url=http://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/brooklynbotanicgarden/history|title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden History|website=NYC Parks|accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref>',
4 => '',
5 => '[[Harold Caparn]] was appointed as the landscape architect in 1912. Caparn designed most of the rest of the grounds over the next three decades, including the Osborne Garden, Cranford Rose Garden, Magnolia Plaza, and Plant Collection.<ref name="tclf">{{cite web |url=http://tclf.org/pioneer/harold-caparn/biography-harold-caparn |title=Biography of Harold Caparn | website=The Cultural Landscape Foundation |accessdate=April 28, 2013}}</ref> Construction of the Laboratory Building and Conservatory began in 1912, and the building was dedicated in 1917.<ref name="nycparks" /> The building—now known as the [[Laboratory Administration Building]]—was designed in the [[Italianate architecture#Italianate style in the United States|Tuscan Revival]] style by William Kendall for [[McKim, Mead & White]], the architectural firm that built the Brooklyn Museum, [[Manhattan Municipal Building]], and many other prominent New York City buildings. It was designated a New York City Landmark in 2007.<ref name="nyclpc">{{cite web|url=http://s-media.nyc.gov/agencies/lpc/lp/2214.pdf|title=Laboratory Administration Building, Brooklyn Botanic Garden|date=March 13, 2007|publisher=[[New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission]]|access-date=September 30, 2019}}</ref>',
6 => '',
7 => 'The Garden began charging for admission in 1996, after cuts in state and federal funding and an increase in operating costs.<ref name="afeegrows">{{cite news |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/boroughs/fee-grows-brooklyn-botanic-garden-charge-admission-article-1.722031|author=Laura Williams|date=January 30, 1996|title=A Fee Grows in Brooklyn: Botanic Garden to Charge Admission|newspaper=Daily News|accessdate=April 9, 2017}}</ref> ',
8 => '',
9 => 'In April 2019, after protests by local activists, a judge issued a temporary [[restraining order]] against a high rise development proposed by developer [[Isaac Hager]] which would cast shadows over the garden.<ref>{{Cite web|first= Lore |last=Croghan |authorlink= |title= Judge issues restraining order to halt development near Brooklyn Botanic Garden |publisher=[[Brooklyn Eagle]]|date=April 18, 2019 |url=https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2019/04/18/judge-issues-restraining-order-to-halt-development-near-brooklyn-botanic-garden/ |accessdate=}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|title=Isaac Hager takes Crown Heights rezoning off the table … for now developer to take second look at rezoning lots for 565 apartments |magazine=[[The Real Deal (magazine)|The Real Deal]]|date=April 20, 2017 |url=https://therealdeal.com/2017/04/20/isaac-hager-takes-crown-heights-rezoning-off-the-table-for-now/ }}</ref> The site next door to the proposed project, owned by Continuum Companies and Lincoln Equities, also being considered for development, is being fought by activists for the same reasons.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://therealdeal.com/2018/07/31/isaac-hager-sells-crown-heights-development-site-for-40m/|title=Isaac Hager {{!}} 40 Crown Street {{!}} Carmel Partners|date=2018-07-31|website=The Real Deal New York|language=en-US|access-date=2019-10-26}}</ref> The BBG is putting on an exhibition called "Fight for Sunlight" to bring more attention to the issue<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbg.org/visit/event/fight_for_sunlight_exhibit|title=Fight for Sunlight Exhibit|website=Brooklyn Botanic Garden|language=en|access-date=2019-10-26}}</ref> contending that unlike what developers say, its conservatories "would face catastrophic events."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.amny.com/news/brooklyn-botanic-garden-shadows-1.34466573|title=Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s ‘Fight for Sunlight’ protests Crown Heights building proposal|last=Brown|first=Nicole|date=July 31, 2019|work=AM New York|access-date=October 26, 2019}}</ref>'
] |
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node ) | false |
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp ) | 1572287064 |