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Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids: Creating the San Antonio Botanical Garden

Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids: Creating the San Antonio Botanical Garden in Brampton, ON

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Current price: $31.19
Original price: $38.99
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Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids: Creating the San Antonio Botanical Garden

Coles

Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids: Creating the San Antonio Botanical Garden in Brampton, ON

By None

Current price: $31.19
Original price: $38.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: Kobo eBook

Visit retailer's website
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
For nearly a century, San Antonio dreamed of a botanical garden. Ideas surfaced, sites were debated, and plans repeatedly fell away. Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids tells the compelling and often surprising story of how that long-deferred vision finally took root, and how a neglected ridge shaped by reservoirs, park fragments, and municipal afterthoughts became the San Antonio Botanical Garden, now recognized as one of the nation’s leading regional gardens. As the garden took form, its character was shaped by a series of ambitious and unconventional choices. A dramatic glass conservatory rose above the park’s ridge, establishing a bold architectural presence and a new symbol for the city. Historic buildings were dismantled and relocated to the garden and then reassembled, and a nineteenth-century reservoir was adapted into an amphitheater. The creation of an authentic Japanese garden and a sustained emphasis on native and regionally adapted plants grounded the botanical garden in both global traditions and local ecology. The garden’s progress depended on the efforts of many individuals. Garden club advocates worked for decades to bring the project into being, and city employees opened the grounds to visitors even as planting and construction continued. City leader Gilbert Denman Jr. provided steady guidance and facilitated private support that expanded the garden’s ambitions, including championing the conservatory that drew national and international attention. Ying Doon Moy, a gifted horticulturist, further shaped the garden’s identity through groundbreaking plant hybridization suited to the South Texas climate. More than a history of an institution, Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids is the story of how a place was made. It shows how patience, collaboration, and long-term commitment turned an overlooked landscape into a public garden that belongs to San Antonio, reflecting the city’s past while continuing to grow alongside the people who care for it.
For nearly a century, San Antonio dreamed of a botanical garden. Ideas surfaced, sites were debated, and plans repeatedly fell away. Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids tells the compelling and often surprising story of how that long-deferred vision finally took root, and how a neglected ridge shaped by reservoirs, park fragments, and municipal afterthoughts became the San Antonio Botanical Garden, now recognized as one of the nation’s leading regional gardens. As the garden took form, its character was shaped by a series of ambitious and unconventional choices. A dramatic glass conservatory rose above the park’s ridge, establishing a bold architectural presence and a new symbol for the city. Historic buildings were dismantled and relocated to the garden and then reassembled, and a nineteenth-century reservoir was adapted into an amphitheater. The creation of an authentic Japanese garden and a sustained emphasis on native and regionally adapted plants grounded the botanical garden in both global traditions and local ecology. The garden’s progress depended on the efforts of many individuals. Garden club advocates worked for decades to bring the project into being, and city employees opened the grounds to visitors even as planting and construction continued. City leader Gilbert Denman Jr. provided steady guidance and facilitated private support that expanded the garden’s ambitions, including championing the conservatory that drew national and international attention. Ying Doon Moy, a gifted horticulturist, further shaped the garden’s identity through groundbreaking plant hybridization suited to the South Texas climate. More than a history of an institution, Texas Trails and Glass Pyramids is the story of how a place was made. It shows how patience, collaboration, and long-term commitment turned an overlooked landscape into a public garden that belongs to San Antonio, reflecting the city’s past while continuing to grow alongside the people who care for it.

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