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Newly opened rooms in America's largest home shine for ChristmasDecember 13, 1999
By Laurel Shannon (CNN) -- As any homeowner knows, redecorating is no easy process. Before pulling out the paintbrushes or ushering in the carpet crew, there's planning -- months of poring over paint chips, furniture catalogs and magazine clippings. It's enough to provoke trepidation in all but the most seasoned (or foolhardy) homeowner. Apply that to a century-old mansion that's an icon of American domestic architecture, and you have an idea of what staffers at Biltmore Estate faced when they decided to renovate four guest suites in the historic home. Completed in 1895, the 250-room Biltmore House in Asheville, North Carolina, is the largest private home in the United States. It belonged to George Washington Vanderbilt III, heir to an industrial fortune that made him one of the richest men of his time. He commissioned as his architect Richard Morris Hunt, who designed the pedestal for the Statue of Liberty and the main facade of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York's Central Park, laid out the sprawling grounds. Vanderbilt opened his new home to family and friends for the first time on Christmas Eve, 104 years ago. The four renovated guest suites -- now decorated for Christmas as they might have been that festive night -- are the most recently opened of more than 90 rooms on public display. The project took more than three years and a good deal of domestic detective work to complete. Vanderbilt named the rooms for artists and works of art represented in his vast collection: Van Dyck, a 17th-century Flemish painter; Madonna, a tribute to masterpieces of the Italian Renaissance; Morland, an 18th-century English landscape artist; and Watson, an 18th-century engraver. All four of the rooms have private baths -- an unprecedented luxury at the turn of the century -- and it's believed the suites were designated for single female guests. Read about the renovations and see our exclusive 360-degree photos:
Biltmore Estate, in Asheville, North Carolina, is specially decorated for Christmas in turn-of-the-century style with more than 35 Christmas trees and hundreds of wreaths and poinsettias. The house is open daily except Christmas Day and Thanksgiving Day from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tickets are $32.95 (adult), $24.50 (children ages 10-15) and free for children 9 and under with paying parent. Through January 1, the house is open 6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. for special Christmas candlelight tours. Call 800-289-1895 for holiday-season reservations, or 800-543-2961 for general information. Or visit the Biltmore Estate Web site. CNN Travel Destinations: Asheville, North Carolina Biltmore Estate
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