Nederland - Apeldoorn, Park Berg & Bos
Jachtslot St. Hubertus
Nederland - Nationaal Park Veluwezoom, Posbank
Nederland - Hierden, Kasteel De Essenburgh
Nederland - Ermelo, Oud Groevenbeek
Nederland - Arnhem, Park Zypendaal
Nederland - Radio Kootwijk, De Kathedraal
Nederland - Putten, Kasteel Oldenaller
Nederland - Heerde, Pluizenmeer
Nederland – Epe/Heerde, Renderklippen
Nederland - Hoog Soeren, Het Aardhuis
Nederland - Hoog Soeren, Aardhuispark
Nederland - Nieuw Milligen, Kootwijkerveen
drie zwervers in de mist
Nederland - Kootwijkerzand
Nederland - Kootwijkerzand, rijp
Nederland - Heerde, Kasteel Vosbergen
Nederland - Hoenderloo, plaggenhut
Nederland - Niersen, Motketel
witte wollen herfsttoiletjes
Nederland - Hoenderloo, Heldringkerk
Nederland - Elspeet, De Hoop
Nederland - Vaassen, Daams Molen
Nederland - ‘t Harde, Huis Schouwenburg
Nederland - Staverden
Nederland - Staverden
Apeldoorn - Hoog Soeren, Groene Poeltje
Nederland - Hoog Soeren
Nederland - Apeldoorn, Kroondomein/Kathedraal
Nederland - Apeldoorn, Het Oude Loo
Nederland - Apeldoorn, Paleispark
Nederland - Rozendaal, Kasteel Rosendael/tuin
Nederland - Rozendaal, Kasteel Rosendael
Nederland - Hoog Buurlo
Nederland - Assel, Heilige Geest Kapel
wind over de vijver
Waterfall at Mariëndaal
Grey barn, front side, from the Rolbaan (2010)
Happy Autumn...
Radio Kootwijk - the Cathedral
Beekhuizerzand
Nederland - Kasteel Doorwerth
Nederland - Harderwijk, Vischpoort
fairy tree | elfenboom | feenbaum | arbre des fées…
Nederland - Hulshorst, De Maagd
Location
Lat, Lng:
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
" A la découverte du BENELUX // Die BENELUX - Länder entdecken"
" A la découverte du BENELUX // Die BENELUX - Länder entdecken"
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 24 Aug 2020
-
648 visits
Nederland – Apeldoorn, Paleis Het Loo tuin
Paleis Het Loo (Het Loo Palace) was built in 1686 for stadtholder Willem III and his wife queen Mary of England. The palace was the summer residence of the Dutch stadtholders, kings and queens from 1686 to 1975. Princess Margriet last inhabited parts of the palace.
Het Loo was planned and created as a combination of a palace and baroque garden. This garden - designed by Claude Desgotz - was more than a royal hobby; it was a symbol for the position and power of the royal couple. All elements in the garden, such as the garden statues and the fountains, fit within this symbolic meaning. Flowers and plants play are important elements in the gardens of Paleis Het Loo. In the 17th century, a garden with exotic - and therefore expensive - flowers and plants meant that the owner had the wealth and contacts to have such a garden laid out and maintained.
In the 18th century the baroque garden was replaced by an English landscape garden. However, the original gardens were restored from 1980 to 1984, when the palace and gardens became a national museum. The starting point was preserved design drawings, as well as excavations on site. Some of the plants at Het Loo change every year, both in the spring and in the summer. The aim is to achieve the most accurate possible reconstruction of the original garden.
(During our last visit the garden was decorated with four monumental contemporary art works - 'The Garden of Earthly Worries’ - designed by the Polish-American architect Daniel Libeskind. It is the first time that contemporary art is on show in the garden of Paleis Het Loo.)
Het Loo was planned and created as a combination of a palace and baroque garden. This garden - designed by Claude Desgotz - was more than a royal hobby; it was a symbol for the position and power of the royal couple. All elements in the garden, such as the garden statues and the fountains, fit within this symbolic meaning. Flowers and plants play are important elements in the gardens of Paleis Het Loo. In the 17th century, a garden with exotic - and therefore expensive - flowers and plants meant that the owner had the wealth and contacts to have such a garden laid out and maintained.
In the 18th century the baroque garden was replaced by an English landscape garden. However, the original gardens were restored from 1980 to 1984, when the palace and gardens became a national museum. The starting point was preserved design drawings, as well as excavations on site. Some of the plants at Het Loo change every year, both in the spring and in the summer. The aim is to achieve the most accurate possible reconstruction of the original garden.
(During our last visit the garden was decorated with four monumental contemporary art works - 'The Garden of Earthly Worries’ - designed by the Polish-American architect Daniel Libeskind. It is the first time that contemporary art is on show in the garden of Paleis Het Loo.)
Günter Klaus, Cesare Musazzi, , Claude Ahn and 77 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
belle semaine mon ami♫
Have a nice week
The chosen details allow to better observe the charm of this fantastic garden
Many thanks also for sharing your country's unknown heritage
Have a good new week.
Freundliche Grüße und eine gute Woche
Erich
I'm not that keen on very formal gardens like this. Whilst I recognise their beauty, I prefer to visit gardens that are less structured.
Jaap van 't Veen club has replied to Keith Burton clubBonne journée, Jaap !
Sorry about not commenting much, I still have to be careful about straining my fingers.
Have a great day my friend ;-)
All the best, Doug
Merci du partage .
and the pips are very interesting too, Jaap ******
These contemporary works have visibly been selected to discreetly fit in with the design of the garden.
Gruß Uwe
Jaap van 't Veen club has replied to Uwe Klimpke club......wünsche noch einen schönen Nachmittag,ganz liebe Grüße Güni:))
Sign-in to write a comment.