Indiana’s historic building stock includes examples designed by such world-renown architects as Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, Eero Saarinen, Philip Johnson, Richard Meier, and Michael Graves, just to name a few.
Saved from near ruin, Lyles Consolidated School tells the story of a rural African American community in southwest Indiana. The story will be featured as part of the new Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
The Indianapolis 500 puts the world spotlight on the Hoosier state every May. In honor of the 100th running of the famous race in 2016, we examine the origin of the National Historic Landmark track and less well-known places related to early racing history.
Central Park. Tree-lined boulevards. Battlefields and cemeteries. Maybe even your front yard. All can be examples of cultural landscapes. Indiana Landmarks is working to celebrate and preserve these places, where man and nature have intersected in deliberately designed ways.
You’d be hard-pressed to find a more can-do, grassroots effort, or a more exemplary restoration than Prairie Preservation Guild's rescue and revival of Fowler Theatre in Indiana.