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Biltmore Estate
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| Title: | Biltmore Estate |
| Alternate Title: | |
| Creator - Architect: | Richard Morris Hunt |
| Creator - Architectural Style: | |
| Building Address: | 1 Approach Road, Asheville, NC |
| Subject - Keyword: | Asheville, NC; Biltmore estate buildings and architecture; George W. Vanderbilt; Frederick Law Olmsted; Richard Morris Hunt; Richard Sharp Smith |
| Subject - LCSH: | Asheville (N.C.) -- Architecture -- Biltmore Asheville (N.C.) -- Forestry -- Conservation -- Vanderbilt Asheville (N.C.) -- History Mountains -- North Carolina Asheville (N.C.) -- Buildings, structures, etc Photography (Asheville, N.C.) Asheville (N.C.) -- History -- Pictorial works Asheville (N.C.) -- Architecture North Carolina -- Social life and customs -- Pictorial works |
| Description: | George W. Vanderbilt, youngest son of William H. Vanderbilt
and grandson of "Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt, enjoyed visiting western
North Carolina for its mild climate and spectacular scenery. During a visit
in the mid-1880s, Vanderbilt was inspired by a view from Downtown Asheville
so spectacular that he purchased 125,000 acres in the Blue Ridge Mountains
for his summer estate. His legacy is the Biltmore Estate, embodying his
vision as well as that of architect Richard Morris Hunt, supervising
architect Richard Sharp Smith, and landscape architect Frederick Law
Olmsted. The centerpiece is the Biltmore House, a four-story French
Renaissance manor designed by Hunt and completed in 1895. Exterior walls are
Indiana limestone brought by rail to the site. Its steeply pitched roof has
a copper roofline with Vanderbilt's initials repeatedly inscribed along the
crest. Said to be the largest private house in the United States, the
interior floor area of the 250-room house covers four acres. It was designed
as a country retreat for Vanderbilt, his family and friends, and to showcase
his vast collection of art and antiques gathered in world travels--a
collection that remains intact today. At a time when bathrooms were
virtually unheard of, Biltmore House had 43. There are 65 fireplaces and
three kitchens, along with 34 bedrooms, a grand Banquet Hall and a Library
containing 10,000 volumes. Frederick Law Olmsted designed the three-mile
approach road and the estate's gardens including the Walled Garden, an
Azalea Garden with one of the country's most complete collections of native
and hybrid azaleas, a formal Italian Garden and a glass Conservatory. |
| Publisher: | D.H. Ramsey Library, Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Asheville |
| Contributor: | |
| Date Building Constructed / Ended: | 1898-1912 |
| Date Building Destroyed: | |
| Building Type: | |
| Architectural Style: | French Renaissance |
| Building Current Function: | N/A |
| Building Historic Function: | Private residence |
| Tenants: | |
| Format: | (digital) image/jpeg/text |
| Identifier: | |
| Source of Item: | SpecColl |
| Language: | eng=English |
| Related: |
E. M.
Ball Photograph Collection, UNCA W.B. McEwen & Caroline Nichols McEwen Collection, UNCA |
| Bibliography: | National Register of Historic Places |
| Related Images: | |
| Coverage - Temporal: | 1898-1912 |
| Coverage - Spatial: | Biltmore Estate, Asheville NC |
| DC Record Type: | text; image |
| Rights: | Any display, publication or public use must credit
D. H. Ramsey Library, Special Collections, University of North Carolina
at Asheville. Copyright retained by the authors of certain items in the collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. |
| Processed By: | Erica Ojermark, 2004 |
| Updated: | UNCA; Bray Creech, 11/2005 |
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