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meadowlands

n. (plural of meadowland English)

Gazetteer
Meadowlands, MN -- U.S. city in Minnesota
Population (2000): 111
Housing Units (2000): 61
Land area (2000): 0.381372 sq. miles (0.987748 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.381372 sq. miles (0.987748 sq. km)
FIPS code: 41372
Located within: Minnesota (MN), FIPS 27
Location: 47.072722 N, 92.731586 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 55765
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Meadowlands, MN
Meadowlands
Wikipedia
Meadowlands (The Sopranos)

"Meadowlands" is the fourth episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos. It was written by Jason Cahill, directed by John Patterson and originally aired on January 31, 1999.

Meadowlands

Meadowlands may refer to:

Meadowlands (NJT station)

Meadowlands Sports Complex Station, or Meadowlands Station, is a New Jersey Transit train station that is the western teminus for the Meadowlands Rail Line located at the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

The station is situated equidistant between Meadowlands Racetrack, American Dream Meadowlands (a commercial and entertainment complex currently under construction), and MetLife Stadium to which there is a direct aerial connection. There is one island platform and one side platform each approximately in length and have an enclosed passenger overpass, which provides an accessible connection.

NJ Transit operates the Meadowlands Rail Line to the Meadowlands Station for stadium events when 50,000 or more attendees are expected. The station is expected to operate daily once the American Dream Meadowlands complex is completed.

Meadowlands (Darien, Connecticut)

Meadowlands, at 274 Middlesex Road in Darien, Connecticut, also known as DCA Meadowlands or the Darien Community Association House, enjoys a long, distinguished history. The original house was owned by Mary and Frank Green, a wholesale grocer from New York City. Green built his expansive home in the Victorian style in 1876 and resided there until 1915. The home was then bought in 1918 by Charles D. Lockwood, one of the founders of the law firm Cummings and Lockwood. Covering 52 plus acres, the property extended from Middlesex Road and Leroy Avenue to West Avenue. The property operated as a farm with cattle, chickens and fruit trees. The house at that time had on the 1st floor a parlor, library, hall, dining room, butler's pantry, china closet, and kitchen; 2nd floor included four bedrooms, all with adjoining baths; and the 3rd floor held one large bedroom and three servants' rooms.

After being sold and resold several times, in 1930 the house was bought by Alice and James H. Stark of New York City. The Starks soon initiated a large-scale renovation project for the home that remodeled it to the Georgian Colonial Revival style (also referred to as the Regency style), abandoning the home's original Victorian style features. Donald G. Tarpley was the lead architect. The new home consisted of 22 rooms, including eight bedrooms on the second floor and several servant rooms on the thrift floor. The remodeling also saw the establishment of the home's notable landscaped gardens.

The DCA Meadowlands’gardens were designed by one of the premier landscape architects of the early twentieth century, Ellen Biddle Shipman. Shipman designed many gardens for prominent industrialists of the early twentieth century. Her garden designs revealed the importance she placed on privacy, with the garden serving as a secluded retreat from daily life. Shipman’s gardens are also noted for their borders, which Shipman frequently used along with old-fashioned plant varieties to create the feeling of a “grandmother’s garden.” Called the “dean of American women landscape architects” by House & Garden magazine, Shipman designed more than 650 gardens across the United States during the first half of the twentieth century.

The property changed ownership several times before eventually being sold to The Darien Community Association, Inc. (DCA) by Meylert M. Armstrong in 1950, concluding the DCA’s long search for a permanent home. The original 52 acre property was split up with the DCA purchasing seven plus acres. Over the years, renovations have been made to the structure to make it more of a gathering place for the community. The need for an even larger assembly space resulted in construction of the Garden Wing, which was completed and dedicated in 1966 to help create a beautiful setting for many fabulous weddings, lavish parties and informational lectures and general programs.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1987.

A major renovation was done in 2000 to add a state-of-the-art kitchen and other structural enhancements, which further added to the DCA’s appeal. The home became a popular setting for weddings and other celebrations. In 2011 the DCA began a restoration project on the first floor, which had begun to show its wear, with careful attention placed on adhering to the style of the house. The DCA was fortunate to have the help of Michelle Canning, both a highly respected interior designer as well as an active member of the DCA. Existing furniture was painstakingly refinished with top quality fabric, donated by Michelle. The rooms have been beautifully appointed with new paint and paper, evocative of the Georgian design. In 2013-2014, two large capital projects were completed: the installation of parking lot lighting, and renovation of the Garden Wing bathrooms as well as the powder rooms across from the library.

Currently the DCA Meadowlands is a 15,000 square foot, Regency-style estate situated on eight acres of property. Ranging from a spacious Garden Wing with attached commercial kitchen, to our boardroom or intimate library, all rooms look out to our formal garden. The property also includes a working Lord and Burnham greenhouse (original to the estate), and a four acre bird sanctuary.

Meadowlands (book)

Meadowlands is a 1997 poetry book by Louise Glück. It is her tenth book.

In it, Glück explores love through the life and deterioration of a marriage.

Usage examples of "meadowlands".

On a sunny afternoon they rode out together into the wild meadowlands to the east, a vast stretch of rolling hills that neither the Falcon nor the Boar had men enough to till or defend.

The men spread out along one of those tiny streams so common in the Eldidd meadowlands and unsaddled their horses to let them roll, then clustered around the carts to get their rations.

Rust red with a vegetable aura, the meadowlands spread out under the shimmering blue light of the etheric plane.

The houses soon fell back, allowing sweet meadowlands to take their place.

He looked out at the meadowlands, and the glint of the Llan lying just beyond.