Breaking News: Peavey Plaza Listed in National Register of Historic Places
Peavey Plaza, a Modernist urban plaza in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota designed by landscape architect M. Paul Friedberg that opened in 1975, has just been listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
The designation was made official on January 14, 2013. Peavey is the progenitor of the "park-plaza" style of design that combines the hardscape of European plazas and American green space. The plaza, which is currently threatened with demolition by the City of Minneapolis, is widely considered the finest surviving example of Friedberg鈥檚 work from the period. Friedberg, a recipient of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) Design Medal in 2004, the organization鈥檚 highest award, is one of the nation鈥檚 leading landscape architects. Peavey joins an elite group of works on the National Register 鈥 of the more than 88,000 sites on the Register, less than 2,500 have significance in landscape architecture. Historical consultant Charlene Roise, president of Minneapolis-based Hess, Roise and Company, prepared Peavey Plaza鈥檚 National Register nomination.
Peavey Plaza is featured on the cover of Winter 2013 issue, which focuses on Modern Landscape Architecture: Presentation and Preservation.