Lily Pond The Lily Pond in 1915 Several years before the Panama-California Exposition opened, Balboa Park was desert-like with hard soil and little to no vegetation. Sage, cactus, and chaparral dominated the scene. The groundbreaking ceremonies took place over four days, July 19-22, 1911, and between then and December 31, 1914, the entire Panama-California…
Botanical Building Surely, every visitor to Balboa Park’s Botanical Building will attest to the restorative beauty of the place — another legacy of the great 1915-16 Panama-California Exposition. Alfred D. Robinson, one of the founders of the San Diego Floral Association, as well as a gardener, horticulturalist, and writer, envisioned a lath house in Balboa…
Legacy of the Foreign Arts Building Balboa Park’s House of Hospitality attracts myriad visitors. The handsome, Spanish Colonial Revival style structure sits on the southeastern portion of Plaza de Panama, providing beautiful rooms and a picturesque courtyard in which guests can meet, dine, shop, and celebrate. The current interior, however, is unlike that of the…
Gardens of the Panama-California Exposition The 1915 Panama California Exposition turned a desert into exquisite gardens, as Balboa Park was transformed into a gardener’s delight. Indeed, the Exposition was sometimes referred to as Garden Fair. The park was embellished with thousands of glorious plants of many varieties. There were hundreds of trees and shrubs and…