Kykuit

Kykuit

Infobox_nrhp
name = John D. Rockefeller Estate (Kykuit)
nrhp_type = nhl


caption = Front facade
location = 200 Lake Rd., Pocantico Hills, Mt. Pleasant, New York, USA
nearest_city = White Plains, New York
lat_degrees = 41 | lat_minutes = 05 | lat_seconds = 23 | lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 73 | long_minutes = 50 | long_seconds = 40 | long_direction = W
area = 3,400 acres (6 sq. mi.)
built = 1913
architect = Chester Holmes Aldrich and William Adams Delano (house) William Welles Bosworth (landscape)
architecture = Colonial Revival, Other
designated= May 11, 1976cite web|url=http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=1653&ResourceType=District
title=John D. Rockefeller Estate (Kykuit)|date=2007-09-11|work=National Historic Landmark summary listing|publisher=National Park Service
]
added = May 11, 1976cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]
refnum = 76001290
visitation_num =
visitation_year =
governing_body = National Trust for Historic Preservation

Kykuit, also known as John D. Rockefeller Estate, is a 40-room National Trust house in Westchester County, New York, built by the oil businessman, philanthropist and founder of the prominent Rockefeller family, John D. Rockefeller (Senior), and his son, John D. Rockefeller Jr (Junior), enriched with art collected by a third-generation family member, the Governor of New York and Vice-President of the United States, Nelson A. Rockefeller. It has been the home to four generations of the family.

"Kykuit" (pronounced cake-eight) means "lookout" in Dutch (though currently spelled "kijkuit"). It is situated in Pocantico Hills, on the highest point of the local surrounds near Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow, one hour's drive north of the city. It overlooks the Hudson River at Tappan Zee and, in the distance, the New York skyline.

History and construction

One of America's most famous private residences, the stone mansion was constructed by the architects Chester Holmes Aldrich and William Adams Delano (Aldrich was a distant relative of Junior's wife, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, who was involved as artistic consultant and in the interior design of the mansion). Senior had originally purchased land in the area as early as 1893, inspired by his brother William's ostentatious 204-room mansion ("Rockwood Hall"), which had already been built in the spectacular natural setting of the area.

The Classical Revival Georgian mansion took six years to complete and was refurbished some years after initial construction, being finally completed in its present form in 1913. It is six-stories, with a mansard roof, and has two basement floors, with many interconnecting underground passageways and service delivery tunnels. It features interiors designed by Ogden Codman, Jr., collections of Chinese and European ceramics, fine furnishings and 20th century art. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976.citation |title=PDFlink| [http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Text/76001290.pdf National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: John D. Rockefeller Estate] |1.07 MiB |author=James Sheire |date=February, 1976 |publisher=National Park Service and PDFlink| [http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Photos/76001290.pdf Accompanying 22 photos, exterior, undated.] |2.59 MiB ]

In 1979, its occupant, Nelson Rockefeller, upon his death, bequeathed his one-third interest in the estate to the "National Trust for Historic Preservation". As a result of that gift, Kykuit is now open to the public for tours. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D02E3D91238F931A35751C0A9659C8B63 New York Times, 2003: The Estate Next Door] ] The tours are operated by Historic Hudson Valley. The imposing local stone structure, fronted at the top with the Rockefeller emblem, is centrally located in an inner sanctum of about 250 acres (1 km²), referred to as the "Park", in the expansive Rockefeller family estate. This inner area is fenced off, patrolled and guarded at all times around its perimeter, and has massive gates at its entrance. The rest of the estate is known as the "open space"; apart from the family residences, it has always been available to members of the public for recreational purposes.

Initially, landscaping of the grounds was given to the firm of Frederick Law Olmsted, who had designed Central Park. Rockefeller senior was unhappy with this work however and took over the design himself, transplanting whole mature trees, designing lookouts and the many scenic winding roads. In 1906, the further design of Kykuit's grounds was completed by landscape architect William Welles Bosworth, who designed the surrounding terraces and gardens with fountains, pavilions and classical sculpture. These gardens in the Beaux-Arts style are considered Bosworth's best work in the United States, looking out over very fine views of the Hudson River. His original gardens still exist, with plantings carefully replaced over time, although his entrance forecourt was extended in 1913. The gardens are terraced, with formal axes, and include a Morning Garden, Grand Staircase, Japanese Garden, an Italian Garden, a Japanese-style brook, a Japanese Tea-house, a huge Oceanus fountain, a Temple of Aphrodite, loggia, and a semicircular rose garden.

Nelson transformed the previously empty basement passages beneath the mansion that lead to a grotto into a major private art gallery. It contained corridor upon corridor of paintings by Picasso, Chagall and Warhol, the latter two being amongst the many prominent visitors invited to the estate. Over the period from 1935 to the late 1970s more than 120 works of abstract, avant garde and modern sculpture were added to the gardens and terraced grounds from Nelson's collection, including works by Pablo Picasso ('Bathers'), Constantin Brancusi, Karel Appel ('Mouse on Table'), Jean Arp, Alexander Calder, Alberto Giacometti, Gaston Lachaise, Aristide Maillol, Henry Moore, Louise Nevelson, Isamu Noguchi ('Black Sun'), and David Smith.

Kykuit was renovated and modernized in 1995 by the New Haven architecture firm Herbert S. Newman and Partners. The work included major infrastructure changes to enable it to accommodate group tours of the first floor and art gallery, and provide guest rooms on the upper floors. On the third and fourth floors the original staff quarters were reconfigured and enlarged to become guest suites.

The family estate

The vast rambling estate, located convert|25|mi|km|0 north of New York City, comprises a total of about 3,400 acres (14 km²) and is known as "Pocantico", or sometimes, "Pocantico Hills". At its peak, the estate covered almost convert|3500|acre|km2|0 -- some six square miles of property -- and was described as a self-contained world, with its resident workforce of security guards, gardeners and laborers, and its own farming, cattle and food supplies. It has a nine-hole, reversible golf course, and had a total, at one time, of seventy-five houses and seventy private roads, most of them designed by Rockefeller Senior and his son. A longstanding witticism about the estate goes thus: 'It's what God would have built, if only He had the money'.

Today, there are around ten Rockefeller families who live within the estate, both in the fenced-in park area and beyond. Much area over the decades has been given over to New York State, such as the "Rockefeller State Park Preserve", and is open to the public for horse riding, bike trails and running tracks (Bill Clinton, who lives just north of the estate, in Chappaqua, has taken regular runs in the State Park). [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9802E5D71439F93BA35755C0A9659C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all]

In late 1946, a portion of the estate was proposed as the site of the UN Headquarters, when New York City was trying to beat off strong opposition from Philadelphia and San Francisco and secure the organization. Junior's sons, John D. 3rd and Laurance both offered their estate residences, "Rockwood Hall" and "Fieldwood Farm", respectively, for the site of the building. Junior -- who was living in Kykuit at the time -- although appreciating the generous gesture, vetoed it on the grounds that the estate was simply too isolated from Manhattan. He subsequently sent a third son, Nelson, to buy a proposed 17 acre development site along the East River which he then donated for the headquarters. [Estate offered as site for the UN headquarters -- see John Ensor Harr and Peter J. Johnson, "The Rockefeller Century: Three Generations of America's Greatest Family", New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988. (pp.432-33)]

Prominent officials to visit the estate over the years, for dinners hosted by Nelson and his wife, as well as David's lengthy list of illustrious guests, have included Presidents and their wives: Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard M. Nixon, Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan. Other notable visitors, to cite just a few, have included: Kofi Annan, Nelson Mandela, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran, King Hussein of Jordan, President Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Lord Mountbatten of England. [Prominent visitors to the estate, including Chagall and Warhol -- Roberts, op.cit. (p.34).]

Public tours

The inner park area was opened to restricted conducted tours of the mansion and immediate surrounds in 1994, but it is still occupied by and controlled by the family through the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, which leased the area from the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 1991 and is the steward of what is now called "the historic area".

Public tours are conducted via shuttle van from the Visitor Center, located at Philipsburg Manor on Route 9 in Sleepy Hollow, New York; these tours are organized by Historic Hudson Valley, an organization set up in 1951 by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. “to celebrate the region’s history, architecture, landscape, and material culture, advancing its importance and thereby assuring its preservation." [http://www.hudsonvalley.org/about/index.htm]

Notable outbuildings

*The "Pocantico Conference Center" of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF), in the Park, where regular conferences are held.

Originally the massive "Coach Barn", a three-story complex ultimately redesigned and completed in 1913-14, in heavy stone from the local area, it was the first new structure built on the estate. It is three times the size of the Kykuit mansion. It still houses today an impressive collection of horse-drawn carriages, and an equally noteworthy collection of 12 family-owned vintage cars for public viewing, graphically illustrating the development of automotive design from the early to the mid-twentieth century. [Coach Barn and vehicles illustrating auto design - Ibid., (p.98)] In 1994, with funding from David Rockefeller and brother Laurance, its lower floor was converted by the New Haven architects Herbert S. Newman and Partners into a modern, fully-equipped meeting facility for the Fund's conferences, with limited overnight accommodation on the upper floor. The facilities, furthering the projects and objectives of the RBF through conferences, seminars, workshops and retreats for RBF staff, are also available to both domestic and foreign nonprofit organizations, including annual gatherings of all the major foundation presidents and UN Security Council officials, amongst many other dignitaries. [Pocantico Conferences and the Coach Barn - Ibid., (pp.13-14, 47-48); See also the Rockefeller Brothers Fund official website list of Conferences in External Links.]
*The "Playhouse" - The family seat. In the Park, this is the location, since 1994, of the regular biannual family meetings, in June and December.

A rambling French Norman two-story structure completed by Junior in 1927, this structure is also three times the size of the Kykuit mansion. Standing alongside the nine-hole, reversible golf course, and an outdoor swimming pool and two tennis courts, it contains an array of sporting facilities, including an indoor swimming pool and tennis court, fully equipped gym for basketball, a squash court, a billiard room and a full-size bowling alley. It also has dining and living rooms, and a huge reception room resembling an English baronial hall.

*"The Orangerie" - Housing citrus plants, this is modeled after the original at the Palace of Versailles.
*"Breuer Guest House" - A modern house that was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art and transshipped and reassembled at the estate.
*"Underground Bomb Shelter" - The location of cabinet papers and private telephone transcripts delivered to the estate in 1973 - and kept there for an unknown period of time - by the then Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger. [Kissinger's cabinet documents delivered to the estate - see Walter Isaacson, "Kissinger: A Biography", New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992, (updated, 2005) (pp.231-32); Seymour Hersh, "The Price of Power: Kissinger in the Nixon White House", New York: Summit, 1983 (pp.112, 316, 479).]

*The Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture - Outside the Park, this was opened by David Rockefeller and Peggy Dulany in 2004 [ [http://www.stonebarnscenter.org/ Stone Barns Official Site] ] and was established in memory of Rockefeller's wife, Peggy. It is a not-for-profit agricultural and educational center on 80 acres (32 ha) of farmland, in the heart of the 1,100 acre (4.4 km²) family-donated "Rockefeller State Park Preserve", allied to the family-funded "Pocantico Central School". It sells organic local produce, meat and eggs to the nearby public for-profit restaurant, "Blue Hill", as well as to local businesses in the Pocantico Hills area.

*The "Rockefeller Archive Center" - A voluminous three-story underground bunker built below the foundations of the "Hillcrest" mansion of Martha Baird Rockefeller, situated just outside the Park area. This is an impressively equipped repository of 150-plus years of Rockefeller papers, memorabilia and other outside organizations' collections. It is staffed by ten full-time archivists who patrol forty-foot-long shelves on rails, and it contains, for researchers, the publicly restricted and expurgated family history. [The vetted and expurgated family archives available to researchers in the underground bunker - see Cary Reich, "The Life of Nelson A. Rockefeller: Worlds to Conquer, 1908-1958", New York: Doubleday, 1996. (pp.774-75)]

In addition, family members over the generations have had a profound impact on the township of "Pocantico Hills" which is situated in the "open space" of the estate and is completely surrounded by family-owned land. The Union Church of Pocantico Hills, now owned by Historic Hudson Valley, was built by the family, who commissioned the famous stained-glass windows by Matisse (memorializing Abby Aldrich), and Chagall (the theme, the "Good Samaritan", memorializes Junior); they also helped finance the construction of the local Pocantico Hills School.

Residences of other family members on the estate

*"Hudson Pines" - The residence and farm of the family's current patriarch, David Rockefeller, located just north of the Park (177 acres), originally built for, and occupied by, his only sister, Abby.
*"Abeyton Lodge" - The residence of Junior, outside the Park, demolished when he took up residence in Kykuit after his father's death.
*"Fieldwood Farm" - The residence of John D. Rockefeller III, outside the Park.
*"Hawes House" - The residence of Nelson, in the Park.
*"Hunting Lodge" - The residence of Nelson, outside the Park.
*"Kent House" - The residence of Laurance, in the Park.
*"Hillcrest" - A Rockefeller University property, outside the Park, formerly the mansion built for Martha Baird Rockefeller, the second wife of Junior, and the current location of the massive 3-story underground bunker housing the "Rockefeller Archive Center", built deep beneath the home's foundations.
*"Rockwood Hall" - The one time residence of Laurance Rockefeller, outside the Park, this was the 1,000 acre (4 km²) original property of Senior's brother William Rockefeller, which was sold to Junior in 1937. He had no real use for the property, however, and so had the mansion and its outbuildings razed. Later he deeded the property to Laurance who, in 1970, sold 80 acres to IBM for its Americas/Far East headquarters; this is now owned and occupied by New York Life Insurance. Subsequently, Laurance leased the rest of the property to the State of New York as a public park for one dollar a year, underwriting the maintenance costs. He donated this property outright to New York State in 1999, as part of the "Rockefeller State Preserve".

Further reading

*"The House the Rockefellers Built: A Tale of Money, Taste, and Power in the Twentieth-Century America", Robert F. Dalzell and Lee Baldwin Dalzell, New York: Henry Holt and Co., 2007.
*"The Rockefeller Family Home: Kykuit", Ann Rockefeller Roberts (Text), Mary Louise Pierson (Photographs), and Cynthia Altman (Captions and additional text), New York: Abbeville Publishing Group (Abbeville Press, Inc.), 1998.
*"Abby Aldrich Rockefeller: The Woman in the Family". Bernice Kert, New York: Random House, 1993.
*"Pocantico: Fifty Years on the Rockefeller Domain", Tom Pyle, as told to Beth Day, New York: Duell, Sloan and Pierce, 1964.
*"Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr", Ron Chernow, London: Warner Books, 1998.
*"Memoirs", David Rockefeller, New York: Random House, 2002.
*"The Rockefeller Century: Three Generations of America's Greatest Family", John Ensor Harr and Peter J. Johnson. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988.

ee also

*Rockefeller family
*John D. Rockefeller
*John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
*John D. Rockefeller III
*Nelson Rockefeller
*David Rockefeller
*Laurance Rockefeller
*Rockefeller Foundation
*Rockefeller University
*Rockefeller Brothers Fund
*Philip Johnson
*Chester Holmes Aldrich
*Frederick Law Olmsted
*William Adams Delano
*William Welles Bosworth

Notes

External links

*HABS: [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=pphhphoto&fileName=ny/ny1700/ny1715/photos/browse.db&action=browse&recNum=0&title2=Kykuit,%20200%20Lake%20Road,%20Pocantico%20Hills,%20Westchester%20County,%20NY&displayType=1&itemLink=D?hh:43:./temp/~pp_l8Ga:: 12 photos] , [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=pphhsheet&action=browse&fileName=ny/ny1700/ny1715/sheet/browse.db&recNum=0&itemLink=D?hh:43:./temp/~pp_l8Ga::&title2=Kykuit,%20200%20Lake%20Road,%20Pocantico%20Hills,%20Westchester%20County,%20NY&displayType=1&maxCols=2 6 maps and drawings] , [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=pphhdatapage&fileName=ny/ny1700/ny1715/data/hhdatapage.db&recNum=0&itemLink=D?hh:43:./temp/~pp_l8Ga:: 23 data pages] on Kykuit at Historic American Buildings Survey
* [http://www.rbf.org/ Rockefeller Brothers Fund Official Website] Details the regular conferences held by the Fund at the Pocantico estate.
* [http://archive.rockefeller.edu/ Rockefeller Archive Center] A division of Rockefeller University, these family archives are located outside the Park area in the estate.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE3DE1438F932A35751C1A9649C8B63 "Life at Pocantico Then and Now"] A 2002 "New York Times" interview with David Rockefeller on growing up on the estate.
* [http://travel.nytimes.com/2007/02/23/travel/escapes/23rock.html "Spending a Day at the Rockefellers’"] February, 2007 NYT article profiling the family estate.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D02E3D91238F931A35751C0A9659C8B63 "The Estate Next Door"] 2003 NYT article giving a brief overview of the estate.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9501E1DB1F3FF93AA35750C0A9659C8B63 "Development: Rockefeller Kin to Save Land"] 2003 NYT article on David Rockefeller's plans for the organic Stone Barns complex and a niece's intervention regarding a housing development on the estate.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9F00E0DD1F3BF932A15757C0A9629C8B63 Dine at the Rockefellers', Get in Touch With the Earth] A 2004 NYT article describing the history of the Stone Barns Center and Blue Hill Restaurant.
* [http://www.hudsonvalley.org/kykuit/index.htm Kykuit: The Rockefeller Estate] The public tours of the estate conducted by Historic Hudson Valley.
*nrhp source1|NY|Westchester|state3
* [http://www.hsnparch.com/projects/pocantico/pocanticoEXT2.html Restoration of Kykuit] Architect's Website
* [http://www.hsnparch.com/projects/pocantico/pocanticoEXT1.html Restoration of the Coach Barn] Architect's Website


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