Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tree and House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Detail of the War Memorial Relief in Forest Hills…
Centennial Sign on the Bridge in Station Square in…
Detail of a Garage Door in Forest Hills Gardens, A…
Brick House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Brick House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Brick House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Brick House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010
Sunset in Rego Park, May 2011
Sunset in Rego Park, May 2011
Detail of the Roundel with the Godiva Logo in Midt…
Roundel with the Godiva Logo in Midtown, May 2011
Detail of one of the Large Tang Horses in front of…
Detail of one of the Large Tang Horses in front of…
Detail of one of the Large Tang Horses in front of…
P.F. Chang's Restaurant in White Marsh, Maryland,…
Etruscan Cockerel in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Early Imperial Glass Plate in the Metropolitan Mus…
Terracotta Askos in the Metropolitan Museum of Art…
Lydian Terracotta Plate in the Metropolitan Museum…
Bronze Box Mirror in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Bronze Box Mirror in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Terracotta Chous in the Metropolitan Museum of Art…
Detail of a Terracotta Chous in the Metropolitan M…
Fragment of a Glass Plaque in the Metropolitan Mus…
Sardonyx Cameo Fragment with a Goddess Flanked by…
Sardonyx Cameo Fragment with a Sacrificial Scene i…
Sardonyx Cameo with a Nereid Riding on Triton's Ba…
Sardonyx Cameo with a Nymph Riding a Centaur in th…
Sardonyx Cameo Fragment of Hercules and Cerberus i…
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
Attribution + non Commercial + no derivative
-
331 visits
Tudor House in Forest Hills Gardens, April 2010


Forest Hills Gardens is a private community located in Forest Hills, in the New York City borough of Queens. The area consists of a 142-acre development, fashioned after a traditional English Village, that is one of the country's oldest planned communities and the most prominent American example of Ebenezer Howard's Garden city movement. The community, founded in 1908, consists of about 800 homes, townhouses, and apartment buildings, mostly in Tudor, Brick Tudor or Georgian style, in a parklike setting designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., son of noted landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted and partner in the Olmsted Brothers firm. Architect Grosvenor Atterbury proposed an innovative construction method: each house was built from approximately 170 standardized precast concrete panels, fabricated off-site and positioned by crane. The system was sophisticated even by modern standards: for example, panels were cast with integral hollow insulation chambers.
The streets (today private) were fully laid-out in 1910, many of them winding specifically to discourage through-traffic. Though Forest Hills Gardens is private property, it is not a gated community and through traffic, both automotive and pedestrian, is permitted. Street parking, however, is restricted to community residents.
The project was not completed, however, until the mid-1960s when the last remaining lots were developed. Although most of the buildings consist of single-family homes, the development also includes some garden-apartment buildings and retail space. Today, the area contains some of the most expensive housing in the borough of Queens. One of the more famous residents is Geraldine Ferraro.
In 1913, the West Side Tennis Club moved from Manhattan to Forest Hills Gardens. The U.S. Open and its predecessor national championships were held there until 1978, making the name "Forest Hills" synonymous with tennis for generations.
Text from: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_Hills_Gardens,_Queens
Translate into English
The streets (today private) were fully laid-out in 1910, many of them winding specifically to discourage through-traffic. Though Forest Hills Gardens is private property, it is not a gated community and through traffic, both automotive and pedestrian, is permitted. Street parking, however, is restricted to community residents.
The project was not completed, however, until the mid-1960s when the last remaining lots were developed. Although most of the buildings consist of single-family homes, the development also includes some garden-apartment buildings and retail space. Today, the area contains some of the most expensive housing in the borough of Queens. One of the more famous residents is Geraldine Ferraro.
In 1913, the West Side Tennis Club moved from Manhattan to Forest Hills Gardens. The U.S. Open and its predecessor national championships were held there until 1978, making the name "Forest Hills" synonymous with tennis for generations.
Text from: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_Hills_Gardens,_Queens
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.