「Olmsted」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| Two years later he wed a local woman, Betsy | Olmsted, a descendant of one of the original settlers |
| gely follows a design drafted by John Charles | Olmsted, a principal of the renowned Olmsted Brothers |
| Plaza stands in the middle of campus between | Olmsted Administration Hall and the site of the new U |
| The township was named by Aaron | Olmsted after his son Aaron Franklin Olmsted. |
| cility is sited on the location of the former | Olmsted Air Force Base, which was closed in 1969. |
| Location of | Olmsted Air National Guard Base, Pennsylvania |
| Olmsted also provided planting lists of diverse trees | |
| tical crisis on the island and passage of the | Olmsted Amendment at the request of President William |
| nt Way was conceived in 1865 by Frederick Law | Olmsted, America's foremost landscape architect. |
| 9th century landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, the park was originally kno |
| d and landscaped by the firm of Frederick Law | Olmsted and contains meandering walking paths through |
| late 19th by designers such as Frederick Law | Olmsted and subsequently developed by the City Beauti |
| k Clarke Withers, Calvert Vaux, Frederick Law | Olmsted, and H.H. Richardson designed asylum grounds |
| he was assisted by Benjamin Silliman, Denison | Olmsted, and others, was issued in 1847, and the “Uni |
| he creation by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law | Olmsted and others of naturalistic urban parks. |
| w York City's Central Park with Frederick Law | Olmsted; and J. W. Chorley Elementary School, designe |
| 883 he became an apprentice for Frederick Law | Olmsted and Company, where he worked on designs for C |
| ned in the late 19th century by Frederick Law | Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, who gave the design to the |
| was designed by Daniel Burnham, John Charles | Olmsted, and Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., and opened i |
| took possession in 1897 and engaged the famed | Olmsted and Son for landscaping. |
| "central park" was designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted and named Cadwalader park. |
| y of Newburgh commissioned a park design from | Olmsted and Vaux. |
| ly unincorporated), designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted and later by his sons, the Olmsted Brothers. |
| The North Fork flows through Wabasha, | Olmsted, and Winona Counties, with a "channel length |
| Olmsted and his associate, Elias Loomis, were in 1835 | |
| It is the only such site in | Olmsted and one of only four sites within Pulaski Cou |
| n for his design of Central Park in New York, | Olmsted applied same approach to" the nearly 100 acre |
| Some of the most famous of Frederick Law | Olmsted are listed here. |
| The Jamaicaway was designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted as part of Emerald Necklace of green spaces e |
| Olmsted asserted that Notre Dame's actions went again | |
| Marlin E. | Olmsted at the Biographical Directory of the United S |
| Listed at 5' 8", 147 lb., | Olmsted batted and threw right-handed. |
| , 2008, Pope Benedict XVI appointed Thomas J. | Olmsted, Bishop of Phoenix, as apostolic administrato |
| The | Olmsted Brothers and the architects Daniel H. Burnham |
| From 1895-1950, the | Olmsted Brothers (his successors) added to some of th |
| he landscape architecture was arranged by the | Olmsted Brothers company. |
| heir own touch to the landscape including the | Olmsted Brothers and some seventeen years after the g |
| The street patterns was designed by the | Olmsted Brothers and there are representative buildin |
| 000 m2) property, which was landscaped by the | Olmsted Brothers firm. |
| design of South Mountain was finalized by the | Olmsted Brothers in stages over the years. |
| rom Harvard University in 1896 and joined the | Olmsted Brothers landscape design firm, where he led |
| rkway itself was designed in 1894-1895 by the | Olmsted Brothers, the noted landscape architects, wit |
| Cook had worked for the | Olmsted Brothers, and participated with the Olmsteds |
| The | Olmsted Brothers, a noted firm of urban landscape arc |
| It was updated in 1904 by the | Olmsted Brothers. |
| ntributing element and it was designed by the | Olmsted Brothers. |
| is the work of Donald Grant Mitchell and the | Olmsted Brothers. |
| wned on an estate landscaped by Frederick Law | Olmsted, but its north facade can be seen from the ro |
| n mistaken as being designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted, but does incorporate many of the philosophic |
| ban landscape designers such as Frederick Law | Olmsted, Calvert Vaux, Ossian Simonds, H. W. S. Cleve |
| well, and there was not enough room for what | Olmsted considered a proper parkway. |
| Bishop | Olmsted continued to govern the diocese as Apostolic |
| rict 29, which includes portions of Dodge and | Olmsted counties in the southeastern part of the stat |
| He served as | Olmsted County Attorney (1871-1879), Minnesota Attorn |
| Doughnut burger served at the 2010 | Olmsted County Fair in Minnesota |
| In 2004 the TCPA lost a lawsuit with | Olmsted county, clarifying with statewide implication |
| ngeles County, California; died in Rochester, | Olmsted County, Minnesota, December 16, 1924; interme |
| esentative from Minnesota; born in Rochester, | Olmsted County, Minnesota, November 9, 1890; attended |
| ng to Joseph Leonard as written in History of | Olmsted County, Minnesota, |
| TCPA is also used by a group of townships in | Olmsted County, Minnesota who do their own planning a |
| He was elected prosecuting attorney of | Olmsted County, Minnesota in 1861 and served as mayor |
| In May 2010, | Olmsted declared that Sister Margaret McBride who ser |
| Olmsted, Denison.:, | |
| Olmsted described Birkenhead as "a model town” which | |
| Adams Cram designed the church, Frederick Law | Olmsted designed the grounds, the cornerstone was lai |
| iety and the vast avian population within the | Olmsted designed Fens. |
| lanner John Nolen, a protege of Frederick Law | Olmsted, designed the park. |
| Olmsted died in Bradenton, Florida at age 89. | |
| His mother, Charlotte Law (Hull) | Olmsted, died when he was scarcely four years old. |
| moved to its current location in 1891 as the | Olmsted district was developed. |
| unity close beside the College of California, | Olmsted envisioned a roadway that would follow the na |
| District offices are located in | Olmsted Falls, Ohio, just west of Cleveland; the Rev. |
| In June 2007, the unemployed Thomas Potter of | Olmsted Falls, Ohio, wrote to the Department of Defen |
| Olmsted felt that all of the submitted plans were sub | |
| The | Olmsted firm translated this agenda into an urban des |
| Although the | Olmsted firm had originally envisioned a Spanish or M |
| The | Olmsted firm initially advised the city not to build |
| ckasaw Park was designed by the Frederick Law | Olmsted firm. |
| When | Olmsted first examined the property, he saw a field f |
| k had been excommunicated by Bishop Thomas J. | Olmsted for establishing the Praise and Worship Cente |
| hardson and landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted for philanthropist Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1 |
| 20,000 m2) parkland designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted for the Vanderlips, called Beechwood. |
| Marzilli convened the | Olmsted Group on long term care, to make sure that ev |
| Olmsted had a large open air shelter with a colonnade | |
| Jackson graduated from North | Olmsted High School in 1986, and she went on to study |
| r seven counties ( Dakota, Fillmore, Goodhue, | Olmsted, Houston, Wabasha, and Winona Counties), gene |
| A cofferdam on the Ohio River near | Olmsted, Illinois, built for the purpose of construct |
| The Olmstead Depot, in | Olmsted, Illinois, is listed on the National Register |
| It is located near | Olmsted, Illinois. |
| as the only mansion retained by Frederick Law | Olmsted in his plans the Emerald Necklace park system |
| ut Western Reserve and was purchased by Aaron | Olmsted in 1798. |
| park system mainly designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted in the late 19th century, Park Drive, along w |
| ned by noted landscape designer Frederick Law | Olmsted in 1894. |
| Camp | Olmsted is a summer camping facility in Cornwall on H |
| Olmsted is a village in Pulaski County, Illinois, alo | |
| s of the Great Falls, as do vantage points on | Olmsted Island (also accessible from Maryland) and ov |
| Olmsted Island is a small island in the middle of the | |
| 1: A scenic overlook is built into a rock on | Olmsted Island. |
| ly renowned landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr. to design a new planned community, with |
| In 1925, landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr. developed the plans to improve the plaza |
| The developers hired Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr. to design the community. |
| In 1927 Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr. did a landscape plan for UF. |
| The garden was created by Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr. in 1929. |
| originally designed in 1916 by Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr., and features pergolas, loggias, and a b |
| Named for Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr., the landscape architect and preservatio |
| ed by Jared Sidney Torrance and Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr., the bridge became the city's second ent |
| he was awarded by Williams College the George | Olmsted, Jr., Class of 1924 Prize for Excellence in S |
| weathering by Boston architect Frederick Law | Olmsted, Jr.. |
| Frederick Law | Olmsted landscaped its grounds. |
| ore House, the grounds of which Frederick Law | Olmsted landscaped. |
| ent H. H. Richardson buildings with their own | Olmsted landscapes. |
| None of the | Olmsted landscaping has survived. |
| The | Olmsted Locks and Dam is a concrete dam and locks pro |
| In October 1883, Richardson and | Olmsted made their first visit to the property to dis |
| designed in the 19th century by Frederick Law | Olmsted, meet. |
| Olmsted not only created numerous city parks around t | |
| dam W. Russell (born April 14, 1983, in North | Olmsted, Ohio) is a Major League Baseball pitcher for |
| land encompassed the areas now known as North | Olmsted, Ohio, Olmsted Falls, Ohio and Olmsted Townsh |
| y coach throughout the 70's and 80's in North | Olmsted, Ohio. |
| n, Vermont and its operations center in North | Olmsted, Ohio. |
| The company is headquartered in North | Olmsted, Ohio. |
| 1890s by landscape architect Charles Eliot of | Olmsted, Olmsted and Eliot, and built by Boston contr |
| nstructed in 1734 and was later redesigned by | Olmsted, Olmsted & Eliot. |
| e 1880s, when Smith College hired the firm of | Olmsted, Olmsted and Eliot to develop a campus landsc |
| ked with fellow Boston designer Frederick Law | Olmsted on the creation of the National Zoological Pa |
| ox and was mustered out under Colonel William | Olmsted on June 30, 1865. |
| g which time he helped establish Louisville's | Olmsted Park system, which spurred development in var |
| The Muddy River as it passes through | Olmsted Park |
| em of Louisville, Kentucky, also known as the | Olmsted Park System, was designed by the firm of pree |
| The river flows from Jamaica Pond through | Olmsted Park's Wards Pond, Willow Pond and Leverett P |
| k in Boston and Brookline, Massachusetts, see | Olmsted Park. |
| When the other | Olmsted parks in Louisville were closed to Blacks in |
| The | Olmsted plan dated February 1893 includes curving dri |
| The | Olmsted plan of the original parkway, 1895. |
| Landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted planned its grounds. |
| Olmsted possessed considerable mechanical talent, whi | |
| Olmsted posted a 1-2 record with a 3.24 ERA in three | |
| portions of Dodge, Freeborn, Goodhue, Mower, | Olmsted, Rice, Steele, and Waseca counties in the sou |
| ern Studies at Harvard University, and was an | Olmsted Scholar at the University of Jordan in Amman, |
| Frederick Law | Olmsted, senior member of the firm, is best remembere |
| owls took up residence in the rafters of the | Olmsted shelter. |
| Aerial shot of the | Olmsted site in August 2008 |
| ed all or portions of Dakota, Dodge, Goodhue, | Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca and Winona counties. |
| Palmoplantar ectodermal dysplasia type 6 or | Olmsted syndrome |
| y residential collaboration by Richardson and | Olmsted that is open to the public. |
| ding designed by the partner of Frederick Law | Olmsted, the man who designed Central Park. |
| e city enlisted famed architect Frederick Law | Olmsted, the man who designed New York City's Central |
| Frederick Law | Olmsted, the landscape architect of New York City's C |
| Renowned landscape architect, Frederick Law | Olmsted, the designer of a network of parks known as |
| Niles was married to Bertha | Olmsted, the half-sister of landscape architect Frede |
| Together with the Olmstead Depot in | Olmsted the Illinois Central Railroad Depot represent |
| s first executive secretary was Frederick Law | Olmsted, the famed landscape architect who designed N |
| Cornell convinced | Olmsted to include sporting areas, although Olmsted w |
| The disappointed park commission then asked | Olmsted to be its professional adviser and main lands |
| s of Andrew Jackson Downing and Frederick Law | Olmsted to The Evergreens' landscape. |
| Olmsted traveled west on horseback to visit the land | |
| he Emerald Necklace's designer, Frederick Law | Olmsted, under whose direction the project reclaimed |
| ex Parks to his stepson's firm, Frederick Law | Olmsted visited the newly acquired reservation. |
| His father, John | Olmsted, was a prosperous merchant who took a lively |
| ration with landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted, was listed on the National Register of Histo |
| Olmsted was born in Hartford, Connecticut, on April 2 | |
| Marlin E. | Olmsted was born near Ulysses, Pennsylvania. |
| Frederick Law | Olmsted was hired to landscape his estate. |
| Olmsted was later named the fourth Bishop of Phoenix, | |
| 1889, noted landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted was commissioned by Brewer to design a reside |
| e of the campus was provided by Frederick Law | Olmsted, who had also planned the Biltmore Estate. |
| It was designed by Frederick Law | Olmsted, who designed 18 of the city's 123 public par |
| wo of the best examples of the scale on which | Olmsted worked are the park system designed for Buffa |
| In 1879 landscape architect Frederick Law | Olmsted, wrote that he had travelled four thousand mi |
| His son Francis Allyn | Olmsted wrote a book on Hawaii. |
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