The Source for Richmond Architecture and Design Information

Neighborhood Profile: Bon Air

Bon Air is a neighborhood in northern Chesterfield County. Located roughly 8 miles west of Downtown Richmond, Bon Air was formed as a getaway for wealthy Richmonders. The name, meaning “good air” in french, was selected to evoke the bucolic countryside to which Richmonders could now escape.

The village was formed around the Bon Air Hotel, built in 1880 in stick style. The resort complex offered a range of amenities from croquet to jousting. Bowling and billiards were soon added, though restricted to male customers. A carpenter gothic chapel was built next to the hotel in 1882, presumably allowing weekending Richmonders to stay in Bon Air for Sunday.  Immediately surrounding the resort complex a number of Richmonders built private vacation homes. The rest of the 1880s saw a growing number of permanent residents in Bon Air and an increasingly complex internal economy.

The Richmond and Danville Railway inaugurated service to Bon Air 1882, bringing with it a new wave of travelers. Service was offered several times per day, initially at a cost of 25 cents. Live music was provided on the train.

The railway channeled additional vacationers from the city to the resort, but its efficiency made commuting the reverse direction feasible. The Bon Air hotel burned to the ground in 1889, reinforcing the shift from resort village to bedroom community, a status which Bon Air retains to this day.

Despite more than 100 years of suburban growth, the core of Bon Air still resembles a Victorian era getaway. The area is anchored by the 1881 annex of the Bon Air Hotel and includes a number of Victorian and stick style residences. This cluster of preserved buildings was listed as a National Historic District in 1988, 100 years after the streetcar reached it.

Today, Bon Air is part of Chesterfield County. The area has no independent municipal structure; it carries only the unimaginative title of “census designated place.” Though the core village has been seamlessly integrated into a larger suburban landscape, the residents of Bon Air continue to celebrate their distinct architectural and historical heritage.

D.OK.

Photographs by author

Image Credit:

The map above was obtained from an 1882 tourist pamphlet published by the Richmond and Danville Railroad entitled Bon Air: Its Attractions for Summer Residents; Its Enjoyable Resources for Excursionists. This version of the map was digitally edited by Morgan Riley. A scan of the original version can be found here.

Note: a previous version of this article erroneously stated that Bon Air was served by streetcar service, not the Richmond and Danville Railway.

1 Comment

  • If you are a fan of Richmond history or architecture… - Church Hill People's News | Richmond, Virginia

    […] Neighborhood Profile: Bon Air […]

  • Write a Comment

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *