View allAll Photos Tagged PlaneTrees
Platanus tree (probably Platanus occidentalis) with leaves and fruits
author: Jan Helebrant
location: Czech Republic
license CC0 Public Domain Dedication
On January 17, 2014, the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System celebrated being the first healthcare organization in the United States to be awarded Planetree Silver recognition for Significant Advancement in Patient-Centered Care.
Platanus orientalis insularis. Oriental plane tree. Plátano oriental o plátano de sombra. Seen in the Botanic Gardens, Dublin, in August.
A tree that has been defaced with a message of fundamentalist dogma in front of a Harlem church. A call to New York's 311 hotline revealed that this is an illegal act of "tree damage" covered by the New York Parks Department.
You better believe I reported it.
Day two of our trip to Paris, France.
Once back down on the ground, we walked from the Eiffel Tower through the gardens at the Champ de Mars. It was a little early in the season for the gardens, but I was fascinated by the plane trees that had been "shaved" down one side, so as to be perfectly flat.
One of the largest of London's private squares, designed and laid out by John Nash, dominated by plane trees said to have been planted in 1817 to commemorate the allied victory at Waterloo two years earlier. Other trees of note include a tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera) and weeping silver lime (Tilia tomentosa 'Petiolaris')
An original and unique feature of the garden is the Nursemaids' Tunnel, an early pedestrian underpass connecting the Square to Park Crescent. The tunnel passes under the busy Marylebone Road, allowing families to promenade safely through both gardens without worrying about the noisy public throng passing overhead.
The combination of Park Square and Crescent was designed to form a transitional entrance feature to Regent’s Park, leading the visitor from the formal Nash streetscape of Portland Place in the south, to the green and picturesque landscape in the north. It was described as a 'sort of vestibule' to the new royal park. New gates and railings have been installed to original designs.
The gardens retain most of their original Nash layout and have been managed continuously from their inception by an organisation specifically set up in 1824 to carry out this task, the Crown Estate Paving Commission.
[Open Garden Squares website]
One of the largest of London's private squares, designed and laid out by John Nash, dominated by plane trees said to have been planted in 1817 to commemorate the allied victory at Waterloo two years earlier. Other trees of note include a tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera) and weeping silver lime (Tilia tomentosa 'Petiolaris')
An original and unique feature of the garden is the Nursemaids' Tunnel, an early pedestrian underpass connecting the Square to Park Crescent. The tunnel passes under the busy Marylebone Road, allowing families to promenade safely through both gardens without worrying about the noisy public throng passing overhead.
The combination of Park Square and Crescent was designed to form a transitional entrance feature to Regent’s Park, leading the visitor from the formal Nash streetscape of Portland Place in the south, to the green and picturesque landscape in the north. It was described as a 'sort of vestibule' to the new royal park. New gates and railings have been installed to original designs.
The gardens retain most of their original Nash layout and have been managed continuously from their inception by an organisation specifically set up in 1824 to carry out this task, the Crown Estate Paving Commission.
[Open Garden Squares website]
Day two of our trip to Paris, France.
Once back down on the ground, we walked from the Eiffel Tower through the gardens at the Champ de Mars. It was a little early in the season for the gardens, but I was fascinated by the plane trees that had been "shaved" down one side, so as to be perfectly flat.