Renaissance of the Gardens of Versailles
After violent storms destroyed thousands of trees in 1999, fears of disaster eased when the cleanup revealed panoramas unseen for centuries, fitting neatly into a 25-year restoration plan
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2001, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
"Every one of the gardeners, myself included, had tears in his eyes while clearing away the damage," says Durand as he guides me across the Hamlet, pointing out bare spots where trees had been. "It was as if the storm had ripped something out of every one of us. We couldn’t walk along the broad allées, and we had to climb over branches like monkeys to make any headway."
As I gaze out over a pleasant rolling meadow carpeted with new grass, Durand brings me up short. "Doesn’t look too bad now, does it?" he inquires with a wan smile. "But that treeless meadow was dense with at least 300 trees. The storm tumbled them like dominoes."
On the bank of the Hamlet’s pond, the gardener indicates the spot where a 200-year-old tulip tree crashed down on a young 30-foot cypress with such force that it smashed the cypress to smithereens. "Replacing trees like those will take generations," he tells me.
The perfect storm?
To Durand and visitors like me who witnessed the storm’s aftermath, Versailles looked like a total disaster. It was not. As it turned out, the worst storm in French history folded neatly into an ongoing 25-year master plan for restoring the park. "We have to avoid giving the storm too much importance," explains Pierre-André Lablaude, the park’s chief landscape architect. "There was considerable damage, but it also caused trees to fall that we planned on cutting down anyway, so the storm accelerated a process we had already begun." As Lablaude ranges about his office, he consults precisely rendered 17th- and 18th-century drawings of the gardens on the walls, pointing out areas where the renovation of the 369-year-old park is under way.
The long-range plan was initiated in 1990 after a freak storm knocked down 1,300 trees, a record until the 1999 devastation. Scheduled for completion in 2015, the plan calls for returning the 230 acres of the main palace gardens to the original 17th-century design by André Le Nôtre. The gardens surrounding the Petit Trianon, a stately neoclassic manor house, and the queen’s Hamlet will be restored as they existed in the late 18th century, when Louis XVI’s young wife Marie Antoinette retreated there from the prying eyes of the Bourbon court. Including the Grand Trianon—a sprawling retreat the Sun King constructed for his second wife, Madame de Maintenon—and its gardens, today’s Versailles takes in some 2,000 acres.
The glaring weakness of the park was that many of the trees had grown too tall to thrive on what was originally marshland. In Le Nôtre’s design, tree heights were limited to 36 feet, but some venerable giants grew as high as 120 feet. While some oversize trees had been cut down intentionally, those toppled by the storm also benefited the master plan. "We rediscovered magnificent panoramas that had been completely obscured," says Lablaude.
The first thing that strikes post-storm visitors is just how remarkably undamaged the park looks. The trees that were wiped out represent only 5 percent of the park’s total. Large sections of the park have been fenced off where 4,000 new trees—lindens, horse chestnuts, hornbeams, tulip trees and poplars—have been planted, and plans for another 6,000 trees are in the works. "Within 10 to 15 years, we’ll have the perfect view," predicts Lablaude.
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Comments (1)
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Posted by Covington restoration on February 8,2012 | 05:29 AM