Wolf Trap is a census-designated place in Fairfax County, Virginia, named for and largely defined by Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts. The park is the only national park in the United States dedicated specifically to the performing arts. Catherine Filene Shouse donated the original 100 acres of her Wolf Trap Farm to the federal government in 1966, and the Filene Center, a large open-air amphitheater with 7,000 seats split between covered and lawn seating, opened in 1971. A fire destroyed the original structure in 1982; the current Filene Center opened in 1984.
The Wolf Trap summer season runs from late May through early September and includes concerts across genres from the National Symphony Orchestra to popular music acts. The smaller Barns at Wolf Trap, a collection of eighteenth-century barns reconstructed on site, hosts an indoor season from fall through spring. Surrounding the park, the Wolf Trap CDP is almost entirely residential, with large-lot single-family homes along streets like Trap Road, Beulah Road, and Old Courthouse Road.
The community is not an incorporated town. Fairfax County handles zoning, schools (largely feeding into Madison High School in Vienna), and police services. The Silver Line Metro's Spring Hill and Greensboro stations sit a short drive east, placing Wolf Trap residents within reasonable distance of Tysons and the Dulles corridor.
Users looking for escort services in Wolf Trap find the websites indexed on Escortservice.com. Users should understand that the site's role is cataloging; no booking service, no vetting, no intermediary work is performed. Access requires a minimum age of 21.
Wolf Trap is a census-designated place in Fairfax County, Virginia, named for and largely defined by Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts. The park is the only national park in the United States dedicated specifically to the performing arts. Catherine Filene Shouse donated the original 100 acres of her Wolf Trap Farm to the federal government in 1966, and the Filene Center, a large open-air amphitheater with 7,000 seats split between covered and lawn seating, opened in 1971. A fire destroyed the original structure in 1982; the current Filene Center opened in 1984.
The Wolf Trap summer season runs from late May through early September and includes concerts across genres from the National Symphony Orchestra to popular music acts. The smaller Barns at Wolf Trap, a collection of eighteenth-century barns reconstructed on site, hosts an indoor season from fall through spring. Surrounding the park, the Wolf Trap CDP is almost entirely residential, with large-lot single-family homes along streets like Trap Road, Beulah Road, and Old Courthouse Road.
The community is not an incorporated town. Fairfax County handles zoning, schools (largely feeding into Madison High School in Vienna), and police services. The Silver Line Metro's Spring Hill and Greensboro stations sit a short drive east, placing Wolf Trap residents within reasonable distance of Tysons and the Dulles corridor.
Users looking for escort services in Wolf Trap find the websites indexed on Escortservice.com. Users should understand that the site's role is cataloging; no booking service, no vetting, no intermediary work is performed. Access requires a minimum age of 21.
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