olmstead
Every common working citizen in our nation has a set routine they go through every day, Monday through Friday. Usually in involves getting up around 5:00-8:00 a.m. every morning, fighting the same traffic every morning on the way to work, working for eight hours on basically the same job over and over again, gaingin more and more stress as the day goes on, inturn building our stress levels. Then we clock out, go home and try not to let the misurable day we had at work get us down. We need a balance, or harmony in our lives to keep us going back to work every day and putting up with the life of the city. I beleive we need a down time, or just a time to relax and think. We have places in our communities such as museums, cinemas, health clubs, libraries, etc. to help us achieve that balance. Unfortunately, these places are themselves in and amung the big buildings and busy city. We need a place for us to be able to just step out of character, so to speak, and look at where our life is going. I believe the places that provide us with the essential balance in our lives is city parks.Ever since the Industrial Revolution, our cities have become a huge collection of large buildings, even bigger factories, and of course the mi
Olmsted's principles of democratic expansion and public access still guide and inspire urban planners. In describing his own response to beautiful scenery, Olmsted wrote: "Gradually and silently, the charm overcomes us; we know not exactly where or how. Let's face it, they are basically large gardens. Such utopists writers such as Daniel Bond, Leo Marx, and Albert Merrill's described their utopia as a landscaped, garden-like America. I believe this, in some sense, still holds true for many americans. llions of people packed into these factories and buildings. It is a bit of nature's magnificence, and human hands by seeking to embellish it with hothouse plants and marble figures and fountains of bronze cannot improve it. Beyond the purpose of landscaping art, city parks controdict our hecktic work lives with a peaceful, beatutiful, and natural appeal. Olmsted's goal behind his work was to attempt to improve American society. , Shawnee Park Coming out of the Industrial Revolution and extrememly population growth due to the river port, Louisville was extremely excited to recieve these parks. "Fairstead promised the "ideal suburban lifestyle," combining the social and cultural advantages of the city with the restful and peaceful qualities of the country. The tall, ols, thick trees gave Cherokee Park its look. Fredrick Law Olmsted designed and built Cherokee Park in 1891.
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