After seeing this fantastic photograph of Hardy Amies on
Little Augury ...
it got me thinking about summer houses, tea houses, and garden pavilions...
I'm in love with this photograph of an octagonal summer house...
The trellis-work on this example at Rosedown Plantation in Louisiana is fantastic...
Could it get any better than this chinoiserie Thomas Chippendale inspired summer house at the Ashhurst Estate in Mount Holly, Burlington, New Jersey?
Love the pretense of the Derby Summer House at Glen Magna Estate in Essex, Massachusetts...
This Roman Revival example stands on the grounds of Gaineswood
Another example of formal classicism at Kykuit, Westchester, New York...
A rustic, wisteria-clad example...
Locally in Charleston....
A heavily modified octagonal garden pavilion at the Charles Kerrison House at 138 Wentworth Street... the interior contains a domed plaster ceiling...
Formerly thought to have been cow houses, these Gothic follies built on the grounds of the Aiken-Rhett House at 48 Elizabeth Street in the 1840s were most likely originally garden pavilions...
At the end of this drive on Montagu Street sits a circa 1840s Gothic tea house... a popular form seen on the grounds of many early nineteenth century Charleston homes...
This new garden and pavilion is a theoretical recreation of what could have once been at the Francis Simmons House at 14 Legare Street...
A trellised temple at the back of the garden of the Harth-Middleton House on South Battery... coincidentally, the gates in the foreground were moved circa 1910 from a house I lived at on Rutledge Avenue.