From the Emerald Necklace to Central Park, Frederick Law Olmsted’s iconic paintings can be viewed close to home and everywhere in the country. But did you already know you may also sneak a peek at the location where the "father of landscape structure" dreamed up his beautiful designs right here in Brookline? Olmsted moved his domestic to suburban Boston in 1883 and installed the world's first full-scale professional office for the exercise of panorama design. During the next century, his sons and successors perpetuated Olmsted's design beliefs, philosophy, and have an effect on. Step inside his green-and-red Colonial to get a prime view of Olmsted’s places of work, drafting tables, and the unique equipment he used for making blueprints. Frederick Law Olmstead is regarded as the daddy of American landscape structure and is credited with introducing the perception of “public parks” to the USA. He designed or co-designed New York’s Central Park and Prospect Park, Boston’s Emerald Necklace, Rock Creek Park in Washington, D.C., and the complete park systems for Louisville, Ky., and Buffalo, N.Y.