For over 120 years, The New York Botanical Garden has served as a natural Haven for New York City dwellers and out-of-town visitors alike. With a vast collection of over one million plants growing throughout its 250 acres, this garden is one of the great cultural institutions of New York City as well as a National Historic Landmark. But The New York Botanical Garden is much more than just a beautiful place; its plant science and research programs stretch across the globe and its educational programs are teaching the next generation important lessons about the natural world.
WNET takes viewers behind the scenes of this historic botanical garden in the next edition of Treasures of New York, airing Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at 10:30 p.m. on WLIW21 and Thursday, June 27, 2013 at 10:30 p.m. on THIRTEEN; with encore presentations on Wednesday, June 26, 2013 at 4 a.m. on WLIW21; and Friday, June 28, 2013 at 5:30 a.m. and Saturday, June 29 at 1 p.m. on THIRTEEN.
Click here for a sneak peek!
Hosted by Sigourney Weaver, Treasures of New York: The New York Botanical Garden takesviewers on in-depth tours of some of its 50 picturesque gardens and plant collections; the 50-acre native Thain Family Forest; and the beautiful Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. This Beaux-Arts crystal palace houses a breathtaking collection of exotic tropical and desert plants, and also plays host to the Garden's season exhibitions, including the beloved Holiday Train Show and The Orchid Show.
Among the gardens showcased in the program are the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden featuring more than 680 varieties of award-winning roses; the Rock Garden, one of the oldest gardens at The New York Botanical Garden dating back to the late 1930s; the 11-acre Azalea Garden highlighting the global diversity of azaleas and their close relatives rhododendrons; and the most recent addition, the Native Plant Garden, a mosaic of nearly 100,000 native trees, wildflowers, ferns, and grasses designed to flourish in every season.
Outside of the average visiting experience, this program takes viewers inside the Garden's renowned science program, where its scientists are using today's modern technology to unlock the secrets of the plant kingdom, in fields like molecular systematics and genomics. The film also offers a rare look inside a principal component of the Garden's research program: the William and Lynda Steere Herbarium, the largest herbarium in the Western Hemisphere with 7.3 million dried plant specimens in its collection. The Steere Herbarium is used as a reference for botanists worldwide to identify and name newly discovered plants. To this day, botanists in the field are still sending 30 to 50 thousand new plant specimens a year to the Herbarium for conservation, making it a continued leader in the world of plant science.
Founded in 1891, The New York Botanical Garden was created in large part through the efforts of botanists Nathaniel Lord Britton, his wife Elizabeth Gertrude Knight Britton, and a Board that included many of New York's industrial titans including Andrew Carnegie, JP Morgan, and Cornelius Vanderbilt, all of whom shared the desire to build a cultural institution in New York City devoted to the public display and study of the world's plants. This 250-acre site in the Bronx was chosen primarily for its 50-acre old growth forest, which is the largest remaining tract of original forest that once covered most of New York City. Surrounding the Forest, a striking landscape of fertile fields and orchards provided a natural palette for landscape designers, who transformed the grounds with individual gardens and plant collections over the span of the Garden's history.
Two buildings were commissioned for the Botanical Garden. The first was a neo-Renaissance Museum building (today known as the Library) designed by Robert Gibson and completed in 1901. Today it houses the LuEsther T. Mertz Library, the world's most comprehensive botanical library with over a million accessioned items. The second structure was the grand Conservatory designed by the glasshouse architectural firm Lord & Burnham. Completed in 1901, it is the best example in the United States of the crystal palace glass-and-steel school of design. Both buildings have been named New York City Landmarks and are featured prominently in this film.
Treasures of New York: The New York Botanical Garden includes interviews with members of the Garden's leadership, curators, scientists, and staff about its myriad of offerings as well as the countless ways in which the institution's presence in New York City has enhanced urban life, culture, and the worldwide study and preservation of the environment. After broadcast, the film will be available to national audiences at thirteen.org/treasures-of-ny. The website offers past episodes and conversations with visionaries behind New York's greatest institutions.
Treasures of New York: The New York Botanical Garden is a production of WLIW21, in association with WNET, the parent company of THIRTEEN and WLIW21, New York's public television stations and operator of NJTV.
Ally Gimbel is producer of the Treasures of New York: The New York Botanical Garden program. Diane Masciale is executive producer of the Treasures of New York series and local programming. Executive-in-Charge of Production is John Servidio.
Treasures of New York explores New York's cultural heritage by spotlighting its points of interest, distinguished establishments and notable figures. Treasures of New York: The New York Botanical Garden is funded by
Lewis B. and Louise Hirschfeld Cullman and Rosalind P. Walter.
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