Smithsonian Gardens

February 23, 2024
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Arts and Industries Building as seen from the Ripley Garden

Director: Joy Columbus
Total Full-Time Employees: 56
Website: www.gardens.si.edu
Related Links: Smithsonian Gardens Map

Background

In 1972, Smithsonian Secretary S. Dillon Ripley established Smithsonian Gardens to extend the Institution's exhibition, research, and education efforts through horticulture. Today, Smithsonian Gardens continues that founding legacy as an accredited museum and center for horticulture, education, and research.

Welcoming 26 million visitors annually, Smithsonian Gardens is uniquely situated at the intersection of culture, science, art, history, and the environment to engage and inspire the Smithsonian’s visitors before they ever set foot in the door of a traditional museum building.  Exterior and interior gardens, collections, exhibitions, and programs provide a unique platform for storytelling through the lens of plants.

Gardens

The many gardens that surround the Smithsonian museums along the National Mall act as “outdoor museums.” All have been designed to complement the museums they border and to enhance the overall museum experience of learning, appreciation and enjoyment.

Pollinator Garden at the National Museum of Natural History: Located on the east side of the National Museum of Natural History, this 11,000-square-foot area educates visitors about the wide diversity of pollinators and the types of plants that support them. Colorful signage interprets the unique relationship between plants and pollinators.

Urban Bird Habitat at the National Museum of Natural History: Bordering the National Museum of Natural History along its west, south and north sides, this garden features bird-friendly shrubs, trees and perennials that provide food, shelter and nesting materials for some of the more than 300 bird species in the District of Columbia. An active habitat is maintained throughout the year for resident and migrating birds with everything from nectar-rich flowers in the summer to seeds and berries in the autumn and winter.

Kathrine Dulin Folger Rose Garden: Located on the east side of the Smithsonian Castle and the main façade of the Arts and Industries Building, this garden is in bloom with colorful and fragrant roses from mid-May through November. Bulbs, perennials, annuals, tropical plants, potted herbs and evergreens enhance the garden’s year-round beauty.

Courtyard Garden at the Freer Gallery of Art: This elegantly designed outdoor space invites relaxation and quiet contemplation in the heart of the Freer Gallery.

Enid A. Haupt Garden: This 4.2-acre garden is actually a rooftop garden located directly above the S. Dillon Ripley Center, the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and the National Museum of African Art. It comprises three separate gardens (a Victorian-style parterre, Chinese Moongate Garden and Moorish Fountain Garden), each reflecting the cultural influences celebrated in the adjacent architecture and in the museums below.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: Transformed by season, time of day and even weather, this 1.3-acre sunken garden and open-air gallery provides an ever-changing backdrop and contemplative haven for viewing more than 60 large-scale works of art.

Robert and Arlene Kogod Courtyard at the Smithsonian American Art Museum: Surrounded by the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery, this indoor landscape is protected from the elements by a massive glass-and-steel canopy. The courtyard beds are rotated seasonally to feature different plant displays and exhibits. 

National Air and Space Museum Landscape: Set in multiple tiers of walled terraces located around the museum, more than 2.5 acres of trees, shrubs, and herbaceous perennial and annual plants provide year-round seasonal interest to museum visitors.

Common Ground: Our American Garden at the National Museum of American History: This garden, located in the terraced beds at the Mall entrance of the museum, shares the stories of plants and their importance to people. Americans throughout history, and today, have grown flowers and herbs as a way of honoring memory, providing healing, promoting diversity and inspiring ingenuity.

Victory Garden at the National Museum of American History: Located on the museum’s east side, this garden is typical of vegetable gardens created during World War II, when growing food for home consumption was an important part of the war effort. It complements the museum’s permanent exhibition, “Within These Walls,” which tells the stories of five New England families, including the Scotts, who planted their own victory garden during World War II.

Native Landscape at the National Museum of the American Indian: The grounds surrounding this museum recall the natural landscape that existed before European contact, with dozens of native plant species adorning four habitats: upland hardwood forest, wetland, cropland and meadow.

Mary Livingston Ripley Garden: Nestled between the Arts and Industries Building and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, this pocket garden, carved out of a space once slated to become a parking lot, is an unexpected oasis for visitors to the National Mall. Its curvilinear designed space includes an expansive plant palette with dozens of unusual varieties of annual and perennial plants, shrubs and trees planted in raised beds.

Landscape at the National Museum of African American History and Culture: The landscape surrounding this museum draws on the open, pastoral nature of the Washington Monument grounds. It features broad, sweeping paths layered with trees native to the Southeast, perennials in shades of blue and white, and a lawn planted with more than 450,000 purple crocus.

Anacostia Community Museum Landscape: A living exhibit outside this museum connects it to the neighborhoods and environment that surround it. Plants that are native to the area help restore habitats by providing food and shelter for native birds, insects and other animals.

Exhibits

In addition to the many gardens and interior plant displays that it designs and maintains, Smithsonian Gardens supplies and cares for the nectar- and pollen-producing plants used in the ongoing Butterflies + Plants: Partners in Evolution exhibit at the National Museum of Natural History. These plants, grown in a pesticide-free environment, provide a constant source of nutrients for the live butterflies in the exhibit.

Another permanent exhibition in the National Museum of Natural History, on the second floor, is the Garden Lounge. This interior garden offers a place of rest for visitors amidst lush tropical plants. The display includes live plants—cycads, ferns, bromeliads, and orchids—and content, through panels and interactives, that explore the history, diversity, and dispersal of plants.

Each year, Smithsonian Gardens collaborates with the United States Botanic Garden to present a themed orchid exhibit that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors. The two institutions share plants and resources, making it possible to produce an exhibition that lasts for three months. Each exhibit showcases hundreds of spectacular orchid specimens and educates visitors on subjects as varied as biodiversity to how orchids are used in food and medicine. 

Another major exhibit that Smithsonian Gardens creates every year features festive holiday displays that adorn the inside and outside of the Smithsonian museums during the winter season.  

The permanent installation in the S. Dillon Ripley Center, Concourse, Sublevel 3, Floral Fashions: From Bouquets to Buttonholes explores the ‘language of flowers’ in the Victorian era. Flower symbolism was an essential part of society in this period and is represented by a sampling of the more than 250 silver, ivory and porcelain bouquet holders in the collection.

Holdings in Smithsonian Gardens’ Archives of American Gardens are showcased in an occasional traveling exhibition series called the “American Garden Legacy.” These exhibitions interpret significant aspects of gardening in the United States and help foster a better understanding of horticulture’s many contributions to America’s social, cultural and design heritage.

Public and Web-based Programs

Smithsonian Gardens provides a wide variety of educational and outreach programs for in-person and virtual visitors to the Smithsonian gardens, including garden tours, lectures, workshops and special events.

Let’s Talk Gardens is a free lunchtime series featuring lectures and demonstrations on gardening basics offered by Smithsonian Gardens horticulturists and other professionals. Topics cover everything from tree care and composting to growing hops and herbs at home.

Community of Gardens is a digital, participatory archive hosted by Smithsonian Gardens and created by public input. This digital home for sharing and preserving the stories of gardens and the gardeners who make them grow through images, videos and stories helps people understand the meaning and value of gardens to American life.

Smithsonian Gardens serves a national audience with online content. Its web-based platforms raise awareness of the gardens, plant collections, photographic archives, garden artifacts, program offerings, activity packages and donation opportunities. This digital presence engages virtual visitors in lively and meaningful conversations and extends the museum experience into their community.

Collections

Smithsonian Gardens manages three distinct collections:

Archives of American Gardens: AAG is a leader in collecting, preserving and providing access to visual resources that document the history of gardens in America. This repository offers landscape designers, historians, researchers and garden enthusiasts access to a collection of more than 150,000 photographic images and records that document a wide range of historic and contemporary American gardens.

Living Plant Collection: Smithsonian Gardens’ Living Plant Collections are grown especially for education, horticultural display, conservation and research. They include more than 6,000 orchids from all over the world that are featured in interior plant displays across the Smithsonian museums as well as more than 1,900 native and exotic specimen trees located throughout the Smithsonian museum grounds and gardens surrounding the National Mall. In addition to offering visitors a chance to enjoy their beauty, these trees provide significant environmental benefits such as removing pollutants from the air, preventing soil erosion and furnishing habitat for urban wildlife.

Garden Furnishings and Horticultural Artifacts Collection: Numbering more than 1,300 items, this collection lends insight into the horticulture and floriculture trades as well as historic garden design trends, particularly during the Victorian era (1837–1901). Scores of antique cast-iron garden furnishings from this collection, including fountains, benches and urns, are exhibited throughout the Smithsonian gardens.

Research

Smithsonian Gardens develops, implements and shares best practices and state-of-the-art operations relating to horticultural production, maintenance, management and display with the public and with its peers. Its ongoing efforts to engage in sustainable practices have resulted in operational improvements that have had a significant impact on the environment.  

Publications

A Guide to Smithsonian Gardens, published by Smithsonian Books, includes detailed information about the history, design and plants of each garden. The Encyclopedia of Garden Plants for Every Location, published by DK in association with the Smithsonian, identifies thousands of plants suited for particular planting conditions.

About the Smithsonian Gardens

Most of the Smithsonian gardens are accessible to pedestrian traffic every day except December 25. Weekly tours of the gardens are available from May through September (weather permitting, excluding federal holidays). Check the Smithsonian Gardens’ website for details.

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SI-8-2024

 

 

Solo Medios 

Sophia Ancira

202-718-3290

anciras@si.edu