TEXT AND PHOTOS, NOT FOR REPRODUCTION WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION
Treasure in Buffalo

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One of the best ivy collections in the United States is in Buffalo, New York, housed in one of three dramatic Victorian onion-domed glass buildings at the Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens. The collection has over 400 different cultivars, more than any other public garden in the world. |
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On October 3, 2006, members of the Toronto Chapter of the American Ivy Society chartered a bus to come from Canada to visit the Buffalo Botanical Gardens and to see this unusual collection placed in alphabetical order and artistically displayed in several greenhouses. Members of the Western New York AIS Chapter were there to welcome them and serve a buffet luncheon. Two of the volunteers, Lee Schreiner and Pat Kluczynski, made a variety of unusual ivy table centerpieces and also displayed topiaries in various stages of growth. |
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Soon to Come Sample Collection Photos |
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| History of the Conservatory In 1868 Frederick Law Olmsted, the father of modern landscape architecture was hired by the City of Buffalo to design a park for which it purchased 156 acres with 11.4 acres becoming the site of the Botanical Gardens with its distinctive Conservatory buildings.
Built by Lord and Burnham at a cost of $130,000 the Conservatory was opened in 1900. At opening, it was the third largest public greenhouse complex in the country and ninth largest in the world. The tri-domed profile of the BBG rises like a diamond crown set upon a green velvet cushion a prime example of Victorian architecture. |
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