1868 Vaux and Olmstead Map of Prospect Park Brooklyn New York
by Paul Fearn
Title
1868 Vaux and Olmstead Map of Prospect Park Brooklyn New York
Artist
Paul Fearn
Medium
Photograph
Description
A rare 1868 first edition of Vaux & Olmstead's map of Prospect Park, Brooklyn. Issued just months after its October 1867 completion, this is one of the first published maps to depict the design of Prospect Park. Depicts the park as a whole and includes pathways, lakes, buildings, individual trees, rocks, and elevation measurements. The streets and avenues surrounding the park are also noted. This extraordinary map reveals Prospect Park as conceived by the landscape architects, and indeed “Artists”, Vaux and Olmstead. Vaux and Olmstead were awarded the task of designing Prospect Park in 1866 by the Brooklyn Common Council. Olmstead’s vision drove the overall design while Vaux concentrated his attentions on bridges, buildings, and other structures within the park. The creation of Prospect Park, which was to consist of some 585 acres of public forest, pathways, promenades, lakes, bridges, and meadows, was a seminal moment in civic urban design. The park itself was designed as a whole with every tree, pond, and bench meticulously planned. Olmstead wrote: “Every foot of the parks surface, every tree and bush, as well as every arch, roadway, and walk and been placed where it is for a purpose.” Though Olmstead is best known for his work in New York's Central Park, there are many who consider Prospect Park, his second masterpiece, to be his finest. Today, because of Vaux and Olmstead’s efforts, Brooklynites have the privilege of enjoying what is, without question, one of the finest example of a planned urban public recreation area in the world.
Uploaded
December 31st, 2016
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