Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

E464964

Vizcaya Museum and Gardens is a historic Italian Renaissance-style villa and estate in Miami renowned for its ornate architecture, art collections, and lush formal gardens along Biscayne Bay.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Vizcaya Museum and Gardens canonical 1

Statements (52)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historic estate
historic house museum
landscape garden
museum
tourist attraction
villa
architect F. Burrall Hoffman Jr. NERFINISHED
architecturalStyle Italian Renaissance Revival architecture NERFINISHED
Mediterranean Revival architecture NERFINISHED
area approximately 50 acres
collectionIncludes 18th-century French furniture
European decorative arts
Italian Renaissance art
antique tapestries
architectural fragments
sculpture
completionDate 1922
constructionStartDate 1914
country United States of America
surface form: United States
dateOfHeritageDesignation 1994
designer Paul Chalfin NERFINISHED
developer James Deering NERFINISHED
hasPart barges and stone breakwater
formal gardens
historic village
main house
mangrove shoreline
heritageDesignation National Historic Landmark
surface form: U.S. National Historic Landmark

National Register of Historic Places
surface form: U.S. National Register of Historic Places listing
inception 1914
landscapeArchitect Diego Suarez NERFINISHED
locatedIn Florida
Miami
Miami-Dade County
United States of America
surface form: United States
locatedOn Biscayne Bay NERFINISHED
notableFeature Renaissance-inspired interiors
formal Italianate gardens
loggia and courtyard
ornate stone barge in Biscayne Bay
NRHPReferenceNumber 74000617
numberOfRooms 34
openingDate 1916
operator Vizcaya Museum and Gardens Trust, Inc. NERFINISHED
originalOwner James Deering NERFINISHED
ownedBy Miami-Dade County NERFINISHED
publicOpeningDate 1953
touristAttractionOf Miami NERFINISHED
usedFor cultural events
museum exhibitions
weddings and private events
website https://vizcaya.org/

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Miami, Florida, United States touristAttraction Vizcaya Museum and Gardens
subject surface form: Miami