378 LANDSCAPE DESIGN 



American Park and Outdoor Art Association. 

 [Addresses and Proceedings.] 1 897-1904. 7 v. 

 Contain many interesting papers on public parks and related subjects. 



American Society of Landscape Architects. 



Our National Parks : a conference. Addresses and letters presented at a meet- 

 ing of the Society, 1916. In Landscape Architecture, Apr. 1916, v. 6, p. 101-123. 

 Brings out the relation between the profession of landscape architecture and our national parks. 



Burnap, George. 



"Passing-through" Parks. In his Parks, Their Design, Equipment and Use, 

 Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott Co., 1916, Ch. IV, p. 78-96. illus. 

 On small intown parks. The book is useful also on the subject of park structures. 



Caparn, Harold A. 



Some Reasons for a General System of State Parks. In Landscape Architecture, 

 Jan. 1917, V. 7, p. 65-72. 

 Eliot, Charles William. 



Charles Eliot, Landscape Architect. (See under General.) 

 Chapters XVII -XIX, XXI, XXIII-XXVIII, XXX-XXXII, XXXIV-XXXIX relate especially 

 to public open spaces, including the outlying reservations of the Boston Metropolitan District. 



Lay, Charles Downing. 



Playground Design. In Landscape Architecture, Jan. 1912, v. 2, p. 63-75. plans. 

 Koch, Hugo. 



Gartenkunst im Stadtebau. Berlin, E. Wasmuth, 1914. 256 pages, illus. 



plans. 

 Treats of the design and planting of park areas. 



Mero, Everett B. 



American Playgrounds : their construction, equipment, maintenance and utility. 



New York, Baker & Taylor Co. [1909] 293 pages, illus. plans. 

 National Park Conference. 



Proceedings. ist-3d, 1911, 1912, and 1915. Washington, Government Printing 



Office, 1912-1915. 3 V. 



Papers and discussions on the development and administration of the national parks and monu- 

 ments of the United States. 



Olmsted, Frederick Law, Sr. 



Notes on the Plan of Franklin Park and related matters. Boston, Park Depart- 

 ment, 1886. 115 pages, illus. plans. 

 Contains perhaps the best printed statement of the general principles underlying the design of large 

 landscape parks. 



Public Parks : being two papers read before the American Social Science Associa- 

 tion in 1870 and 1880, entitled respectively, Public Parks and the Enlargement 



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