Travel writer Chris O'Toole sends along a dispatch from a quiet corner of Pittsburgh, where the G-20 Summit is being hosted this week.
Before they discuss firing up the world economy, leaders at the G-20 Summit, beginning today in Pittsburgh, get a chance to chill out in one of my favorite places, Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens. Tonight President Obama welcomes the A-list crowd for dinner at this classic Victorian glasshouse with a twenty-first century twist. Tweaks like geothermal heating tubes, passive cooling in its indoor tropical forest and a grass roof atop its subterranean entrance makes it one of the greenest greenhouses in the world.
By the time I find the pool that catches the waterfall, the air is perfectly warm, and I can almost hear the plants breathe. That's always been the lure of this garden, though its priorities have changed. When it was built in 1893, in a city then choked with smoke and steel mills, industrialists believed they could conquer the natural world. Now the G-20 leaders and the rest of us know that the real fight is protecting it. And the Phipps serves as a reminder of what's at stake.
Getting there: The Phipps is closed to the public today due to the G-20 summit, but will reopen tomorrow. It's located in Schenley Park in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, across the street from the Carnegie-Mellon University campus.
Photos: Above, Phipps' Welcome Center is the first LEED-certified (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) visitor center in a public garden in the U.S. Nestled into the earth, the building highlights the original Lord & Burnham conservatory while providing green roof space on either side of the dome; by Denmarsh Photography.
Below, right, Chihuly chandelier in Phipps Welcome Center, via the Phipps Conservatory.










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