Landscape Information
Although Baltimore park commissioners selected land within Druid Hill Park to establish a botanical conservatory in 1875, the Druid Hill Conservatory, as it was originally known, did not open to the public until 1888. Architect George Frederick designed the building, modeling the structure after Kew Gardens in London, England. It consisted of a large Palm House and a smaller, adjoining Orchid Room. Three contiguous production greenhouses were constructed in the 1920s.
The conservatory and botanic gardens are situated on the western edge of Druid Hill Park. A stone plaza leading to the conservatory鈥檚 entrance features a tiled mosaic of Druid Hill Park created by Baltimore artist Joyce J. Scott in 2010. As is typical of Victorian conservatories, the Palm House and the Orchid Room are built of iron, glass, and wood. Fifty-foot-high glass windows climb to form the Palm House鈥檚 vaulted ceiling capable of accommodating tall, exotic plants. Beyond this, on axis, is the Orchid Room, flanked to the north and south by two glass-enclosed pavilions. The three production greenhouses form the eastern end of the complex. Outdoor gardens are located southeast of the conservatory. The 1.5-acre square space is bordered on three sides by hedges and native oak trees. A nineteenth-century sundial sits upon a stone base in the garden鈥檚 center, which is surrounded by neatly arranged garden beds laid out in parallel rows. The conservatory closed in 2002 for renovations that included converting the three production greenhouses to display Mediterranean, tropical, and desert plants, respectively. It reopened in 2004 and was renamed The Howard Peters Rawlings Conservatory and Botanic Gardens. It is the second oldest steel-and-glass-framed building still in use in the United States and a contributing feature of the Druids Hill Park Historic District, listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.