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About Parkside | Schools | Churches | Getting To Parkside | Parking
Landscape architect Frederick
Law Olmsted (1822-1903) believed in the restorative effects of beauty
as expressed in nature and park settings. In 1868, he and Calvert Vaux
were commissioned to carve a network of parks and parkways across Buffalo,
New York. It was to be the first coordinated system of public parks in
America. The crown jewel of their plan was a 350-acre complex of green
meadows, tranquil waterways, and curving avenues known as Delaware
Park.
Olmsted
recognized that abutting farmland on the northeastern perimeter
of the park served as a buffer against the burgeoning industrial
city, so he expanded his initial proposal to include these several
hundred acres. To make this buffer more permanent and to preclude
industrialization of the area, he applied his visionary principles
to design Buffalo's first suburb. From its inception, the planned
community was named "Parkside," a neighborhood inseparable
from the park.
The area quickly drew the rich and professionals from the city.
Over the next 40 years, the development of Parkside was gradually
and methodically completed. Major architects such as H.H.
Richardson (1838-1886), E.B.
Green (1855-1950), William Sydney Wicks (1854-1919), August
Esenwein (1856-1926), and Frank
Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) designed houses with styles ranging
from late Victorian, Queen Anne, Romanesque and Tudor Revival to
Shingle, Bungalow, and Prairie Style for the residents.
In 1987, the entire neighborhood of Parkside became an Architectural
Landscape District on the National
Register of Historic Places. Today, through the efforts of the Parkside
Community Association and Parkside residents, the neighborhood (now a
part of the City of Buffalo) is unmatched for its stable blend of social,
safety, and affordability factors.
Attractions
Parkside is located in the heart of Buffalo's cultural corridor, and
boasts such attractions as Delaware
Park, the Buffalo Zoo, and the
Darwin D. Martin House
within its boundaries. In addition, the Albright-Knox
Art Gallery, the Buffalo and Erie County
Historical Society, and Forest Lawn Cemetery are just outside Parkside.
For more information about cultural attractions in and around Parkside,
visit our Attractions page.
Schools
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Buffalo Public School #54
Early Childhood Center
Kindergarten through 2nd grade
2358 Main St.
Buffalo, NY 14214
(716)838-7400 |
Buffalo Public School Science Magnet/Zoo
Component
7th and 8th grades
Meadow Road
Buffalo, NY 14214
(716)838-7423 |
St. Mark's Elementary School
399 Woodward Ave.
Buffalo, NY 14214
(716)836-1191 |
Mount St. Joseph Academy
15 Jewett Pkwy.
Buffalo, NY 14214
(716)883-1515 |
Medaille College
18 Agassiz Circle
Buffalo, NY 14214
(716)884-3281 |
The
Nichols School (borders Parkside)
1250 Amherst St.
Buffalo, NY 14216
(716)875-8212 |
Canisius College
2001 Main St.
Buffalo, NY 14208
(716)883-7000 |
Whether walking, driving, or biking, the Parkside district is conveniently
located. The Scajaquada Expressway (Route 198, or "the 198") links the
neighborhood to the major highways of Buffalo and the bridges to Canada.
Under Main Street, at the eastern boundary of the neighborhood, the Metro
Rail subway system connects the neighborhood with both downtown Buffalo
to the west, and with the University at Buffalo's South Campus to the
east. Parkside is also served by several bus lines. For more information
about Metro Rail and bus schedules, visit the Niagara
Frontier Transportation Authority.
Parking varies from street to street and block to block. Many streets have
alternate side of the street parking, so be sure to read the signs when
you park on the street. If you're going to the Zoo, it's most convenient
to park in the Zoo's parking lot to avoid having to cross busy streets.
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