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Strawberry Fields Memorial

The Strawberry Fields memorial is the name given to a landscaped section in New York's Central Park that is dedicated to the memory of musician John Lennon, and named after one of his songs, "Strawberry Fields Forever." It was designed by landscape architect Bruce Kelly (1948-1993), one of the principal members of the Central Park Conservancy's management at the time and the chief landscape architect for the Conservancy's restoration planning team.

It was inaugurated by Yoko Ono, who had underwritten the project, on John Lennon's birthday, 9 October 1985.

The entrance to the memorial is located on Central Park West at 72nd Street, directly across from the Dakota Apartments, where Lennon lived for the latter part of his life. The memorial is a triangular piece of land falling away on the two Park sides, whose focal point is a circular pathway mosaic of inlaid stones, made by Italian craftsmen as a gift from the city of Naples. In the center of the mosaic is a single word, the title of one of Lennon's most famous songs: "Imagine".

Along the borders of the triangular area surrounding the mosaic are benches which are endowed in memory of other individuals, maintained by the Central Park Conservancy. Along a path toward the southeast, a plaque lists the nations which contributed to building the memorial. Yoko Ono, who keeps apartments in The Dakota, contributed over a million dollars for the landscaping and for the upkeep endowment.


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