Biltmore Estate
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| Biltmore Estate | |
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| (U.S. National Historic Landmark) | |
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| Location: | Asheville, North Carolina, United States |
| Coordinates: | |
| Built/Founded: | 1888-95 |
| Architect: | Richard Morris Hunt; Frederick Law Olmsted |
| Architectural style(s): | Renaissance, Other |
| Added to NRHP: | October 15, 1966 |
| NRHP Reference#: | 66000586 [1] |
| Governing body: | Private |
Biltmore House is a French Renaissance-inspired chateau near Asheville, North Carolina, built by George Washington Vanderbilt II between 1888 and 1895. It is the largest privately owned home in the United States at 175,000 square feet. Still owned by Vanderbilt's descendants, it stands today as one of the most prominent remaining examples of the Gilded Age.
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In the 1880s, at the height of the Gilded Age, George Washington Vanderbilt II, youngest son of William Henry Vanderbilt, began to make regular visits with his mother to the Asheville area. He loved the scenery and climate so much that he decided to create his own summer estate in the area, just as his older brothers and sisters had built opulent summer houses in places such as Newport, Rhode Island, and Hyde Park, New York.
Vanderbilt's idea was to replicate the working estates of Europe. He commissioned Richard Morris Hunt, who had previously designed houses for various Vanderbilt family members, to design the house in imitation of several Loire Valley chateaux, including the Chateau de Blois. Wanting the best, Vanderbilt also employed Frederick Law Olmsted to design the grounds, including the deliberately rustic three-mile approach road, and Gifford Pinchot to manage the forests. Intending that the estate could be self-supporting, Vanderbilt set up scientific forestry programs, poultry farms, cattle farms, hog farms and a dairy. The estate included its own village (today Biltmore Village) and a church. Family members and friends invited from all over the United States and beyond came to experience the opulent estate with the splendor of Olmsted's sweet-smelling gardens, rich foods at the 64-seat banquet table and the stunning beauty of Vanderbilt's mountainous grounds. Famous guests through the years include author Edith Wharton, novelist Henry James, presidents McKinley, Wilson and Nixon, and Charles, Prince of Wales.
Vanderbilt paid little attention to the family business or his own investments, and the construction and upkeep of Biltmore depleted much of his inheritance. After Vanderbilt died of complications from an emergency appendectomy in 1915, his widow, Edith Stuyvesant Vanderbilt, finalized the sale of much of the original 125,000 acres (506 km²) to the federal government (begun by Vanderbilt before his death), which became the nucleus of Pisgah National Forest.
The estate today covers approximately 8,000 acres (32 km²) and is split in half by the French Broad River. It is owned by The Biltmore Company, which is controlled by Vanderbilt's grandson, William A.V. Cecil, II. In 1964, it was designated a National Historic Landmark.
In an attempt to bolster the Depression-riven economy, Vanderbilt's only child, Cornelia Vanderbilt Cecil, and husband John Amherst Cecil opened Biltmore House to the public on March 15, 1930.
The house was occupied less and less permanently until 1956, when it was permanently opened to the public as a house museum. Visitors from all over the world continue to marvel at the 70,000 gallon indoor swimming pool, bowling alley, turn-of-the-century exercise equipment, two-story library, and other rooms filled with artworks, furniture and 19th-century novelties such as elevators, forced-air heating, centrally-controlled clocks, fire alarms and an intercom system. It remains a major tourist attraction in western North Carolina, with more than 1 million visitors each year.
In 2005 the fourth floor of the house was opened by the Department of Museum Services by Ellen Rickman, the director. The floor reveals the life of a Biltmore House maid, displaying a servants’ hall, servants’ bedrooms and bathrooms, and three house closets. The Architectural Model Room showcases Hunt’s 1889 model of Biltmore House, while the Observatory offers views of the estate from a central vantage point at the top of the main tower.
Besides the house, the grounds also feature gardens and a winery that are open to the public and the Inn on Biltmore Estate, a Mobil Travel Guide four-star and AAA four-diamond 213-room hotel.
Future plans include the restoration of the Oak Sitting Room (Spring 2009) and Second Floor Living Hall (2012), as well as the opening of the Library Wing guest rooms.
The Biltmore Estate ranked eighth in a 2007 poll by the American Institute of Architects of the top 150 favorite structures in the United States.
The grounds and buildings of the Biltmore Estate have appeared in a number of major motion pictures:
- The Clearing (2002)
- Hannibal (2001)
- Patch Adams (1998)
- My Fellow Americans (1996)
- Richie Rich (1994)
- Forrest Gump (1994)
- Last of the Mohicans (1992)
- Mr. Destiny (1990)
- The Private Eyes (1981)
- Being There (1979)
- The Swan (1956)
- Tap Roots (1948)
- ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2006-03-15).
- Hewitt, Mark Alan: The Architect & the American Country House. Yale University Press: New Haven & London 1990, p. 1-10
- Biltmore Estate official website
- Landmark designation
- Biltmore, a Legacy in Stone with photos
- Christmas in Biltmore with photos
- Biltmore Estate is at coordinates Coordinates:
Categories: Articles needing additional references from July 2007 | National Historic Landmarks of the United States | 1895 architecture | Houses in North Carolina | Castles in the United States | Châteaux | Vanderbilt family | Registered Historic Places in North Carolina | Asheville, North Carolina | Buncombe County, North Carolina | Richard Morris Hunt buildings | Museums in North Carolina | Historic houses | Historic house museums