Light, nature and modernist architecture: welcome to the reimagined Longwood Gardens
Longwood Gardens and its modernist Roberto Burle Marx-designed greenhouse get a makeover by Weiss/Manfredi and Reed Hildebrand in the US

At Longwood Gardens, somewhere during the tenth minute of the after-dark, Beatles-inspired, light-and-water spectacular on show – right as 'Golden Slumbers' transitions into 'Carry That Weight' over the speaker system – a visitor may gaze at the tiny buds of flame dancing atop the 20-odd spurting fountains and wonder: What is this place?
Stroll through Longwood Gardens
'You come in, and what you see first is this crystalline ridge,' says Marion Weiss. The architect – one half, alongside husband Michael Manfredi, of New York-based firm Weiss/Manfredi – is referring to what is (in daylight at least) the most eye-catching feature of the 1,000-acre expanse of Pennsylvania hills and forests, an elevated row of glazed conservatories sitting above the central fountain court.
With a striking new addition from Weiss/Manfredi, a renovated greenhouse from midcentury modernist architecture master Roberto Burle Marx, and a tuned-up, cleaned-up landscape scheme from the office of Reed Hildebrand, the glittering hilltop complex is the centrepiece of Longwood Reimagined, a comprehensive expansion of the century-old public garden aimed at connecting it with a bigger audience than ever before.
The new structures, like the nighttime musical extravaganza, are key to that effort, providing more reasons for guests from Philadelphia (less than an hour away) and Manhattan (two and a half) to make the trek to the former estate of the wealthy DuPont family.
Yet Longwood Reimagined is also more than meets the eye: hidden behind the main conservatories, Weiss/Manfredi’s new administrative and education building, The Grove, provides all-modern facilities in a crisp, light-filled box – a huge improvement on the previous on-site offices, described by Manfredi as 'the world’s loveliest Taco Bell.'
Steps away, tucked into what Hildebrand calls 'a series of hedge-rooms', a new bonsai garden will provide quiet, contemplative moments amidst Longwood’s vastness and splendour. And beneath the main ridge, concealed behind what was previously a simple retaining wall, a new underground dining concourse awaits hungry garden-goers, its vaulted ceiling holding up the massive planted terrace above.
'Those vaults have to do a lot of work,' says Weiss, standing in the arcaded restaurant and events hall. The same elegance and ingenuity is evident in the firm’s West Conservatory, likewise supported by an unseen infrastructure embedded in the hillside – and yet it’s the most visible elements of the revitalised garden that count the most.
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Over the maze of water-bound walkways, the architects’ new greenhouse sports an irregular, constantly shifting canopy, its tree-like piers framing views of what was once the forgotten periphery of the grounds. 'That was the whole premise,' says Manfredi. 'To open up this western section.'
-
Callum Designs comes out swinging with its new take on the bespoke Wood and Pickett Mini
Ian Callum has overseen the revival of this classic coachbuilding brand, with David Gandy as the lucky first customer of the freshly revived Wood and Pickett Mini
-
How Pharrell Williams staged a giant game of Snakes and Ladders for his latest Louis Vuitton show
The colossal game board was designed by Indian architect Bijoy Jain, whose practice Studio Mumbai is famed for its 'cosmic' large-scale projects
-
Summer evenings in Venice inspire Sophie Bille Brahe’s vases
‘Bouquet de Venezia’ is a collection of iridescent glass vases by Danish jewellery designer Sophie Bille Brahe, hand-blown in Murano
-
Tour this fire-resilient minimalist weekend retreat in California
A minimalist weekend retreat was designed as a counterpoint to a San Francisco pied-à-terre; Edmonds + Lee Architects’ Amnesia House in Napa Valley is a place for making memories
-
A New Zealand house on a rugged beach exemplifies architect Tom Kundig's approach in rich, yet understated luxury
This coastal home, featured in 'Tom Kundig: Complete Houses', a new book launch in the autumn by Monacelli Press, is a perfect example of its author's approach to understated luxury. We spoke to Tom Kundig, the architect behind it
-
Tour architect Paul Schweikher’s house, a Chicago midcentury masterpiece
Now hidden in the Chicago suburbs, architect Paul Schweikher's former home and studio is an understated midcentury masterpiece; we explore it, revisiting a story from the Wallpaper* archives, first published in April 2009
-
The world of Bart Prince, where architecture is born from the inside out
For the Albuquerque architect Bart Prince, function trumps form, and all building starts from the inside out; we revisit a profile from the Wallpaper* archive, first published in April 2009
-
Is embracing nature the key to a more fire-resilient Los Angeles? These landscape architects think so
For some, an executive order issued by California governor Gavin Newsom does little to address the complexities of living within an urban-wildland interface
-
Hop on this Fire Island Pines tour, marking Pride Month and the start of the summer
A Fire Island Pines tour through the work of architecture studio BOND is hosted by The American Institute of Architects New York in celebration of Pride Month; join the fun
-
A Laurel Canyon house shows off its midcentury architecture bones
We step inside a refreshed modernist Laurel Canyon house, the family home of Annie Ritz and Daniel Rabin of And And And Studio
-
A refreshed Rockefeller Wing reopens with a bang at The Met in New York
The Met's Michael C Rockefeller Wing gets a refresh by Kulapat Yantrasast's WHY Architecture, bringing light, air and impact to the galleries devoted to arts from Africa, Oceania and the Ancient Americas