Gunston Hall, Colonial Revival villa in Biltmore Forest, US.
Gunston Hall is a Colonial Revival villa in Biltmore Forest, a planned community in North Carolina. The estate consists of a central building with attached wings, surrounded by professionally designed gardens that spread across multiple acres.
The estate was completed in 1923 during an era when wealthy families built large country properties in planned communities. It was designed according to plans by a prominent architect of that period and reflects the building styles popular in the early 20th century.
The property draws its name from a historic plantation, linking memories of early American history with 20th-century estate design. The gardens and buildings show how wealthy families of that era shaped daily life on expansive country properties.
The property is a private residence and cannot be visited inside, but the architecture and gardens are visible from the street outside. Its location in Biltmore Forest makes it part of a larger network of historic homes within this planned community.
The building follows a five-part design with a central block connected to side wings through intermediate sections called hyphens. This design solution was a distinctive feature of Colonial Revival architecture and creates a unique spatial arrangement between the sections.
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