Friday, March 7, 2014

Landscape Architecture Is

Landscape Architecture is
Landscape Architecture is
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Swansea Residence Landscape Design 3D Model avi



Swansea residence landscape design 3D model.avi

Swansea residence landscape design 3D model.aviCheck us out at WWW.4SITEDBM.COM! This is a final landscape design concept created by 4 Site, LLC. for a residential client located in Swansea ...

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Phew Just In Time!


It looks like its going to be a beautiful day today - the sun is shining, there is no wind. Perfect for the first day of the show. We just managed to finish up yesterday evening before it got dark.
Im quite happy with the final result, and will post some more pics later on today.

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Macleaya Plume Poppy

A genus of 2 very similar, very rapid spreading, very tall perennials native to the Orient that are good for the backs of large borders and specimen plantings only, because of their size ( up to 10 x 8 feet ) and potentially invasive rhizomes.
Some plants have been known to eventually spread to cover an acre.
Used in the right setting; the Plume Poppies are SPECTACULAR!!!
The handsome, deeply-lobed foliage is very large, to 20 inches wide. The leaves are blue-green above and whitish beneath.
The creamy-white flowers are borne on plume like panicles up to 3 feet long, during mid to late summer.
Hardy zones 2 to 8 in full sun to partial shade on moist, deep, fertile, well drained soil.
Install new plants during autumn or early spring only. Pest and disease problems are very rare, if slugs do occur treat by spreading diatomacous earth on the soil around the plant. Propagation is from seed or division while dormant. Deadhead old flower stems, cut plants down to close to groundlevel during late autumn.

Macleaya cordata
Native to China and Japan. White flowers from July to September.

* photos taken on May 16 2010 @ Cylburn Arboretum, Baltimore, MD











* photos taken on Jul 31 in Hyde Park, NY







Macleaya microcarpa
Native to central China. Even faster growing than the similar Macleaya cordata, with pink flowers from July to August.
Kelways Coral Plume
Slightly bluer foliage and inntense pink flowers.
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Thursday, March 6, 2014

Thinking Spring Color in the Garden Part I Evergreens

Hinoki Cypress Crippsi
The snow is finally starting to melt here in the northeast and thoughts of spring and returning to the garden are going through my mind.  Since evergreens are the "foundation" of the garden I am going to start with these wonderful all season interest plantings.  Evergreens of course are known for their ability to screen, add privacy to a spot and serve as the ultimate backbone of the garden.  Evergreens can sometimes be underestimated with the misunderstanding that they lack color and variety of texture but quite the opposite is true.  These dependable additions can add variety and color twelve months of the year.  The varieties I will be discussing do apply to zone 7 but are quite versatile and can be used in a number of climate zones.

Some of my favorite evergreens for brightening up any garden include the genus picea (spruce), chamaecyparis (cypress), juniperus (juniper) and cedrus (cedar).   In the spruce catergory-the Colorado Blue Spruce Hoopsi is a favorite which grows to an average of fifteen feet in 10 years, stays at smaller size than an ordinary spruce and exhibits a characteristic  blue color throughout the year.  A smaller globe variety shrub form of the blue spruce is the Montgomery Globe Spruce, another nice addition to any well lit garden. 

Gold Mop Cypress
The genus chamaecyparis includes my favorite golden additions to the garden including chamaecyparis pisifera Gold Mop-an evergreen shrub growing to approximately three feet in height over time, much smaller than its predecessor the Gold Thread cypress which can reach an eventual height of fifteen feet.   The Crippsi Cypress is a lovely larger form of  chamaecyparis reaching fifteen to thirty feet over time and the dwarf golden form of hinoki cypress chamaecyparis obtusa Nana Aurea only reaches about four feet and is a prize in the landscape.   I must not forget to mention another golden variety - a personal favorite of evergreen which is not a cypress but rather the genus picea (spruce) which I have recently added to my garden.   If you area a spruce enthusiast then the Oriental Gold Spruce, picea Skylands is by all means one of the most beautiful evergreen trees imaginable and makes a grand stand alone statement to the evergreen-perennial garden.  

Juniperus Blue Star
In the genus juniperus there are so many selections as well but the two I favor for instant color are juniperus blue star - blue in color as the name indicates and juniperus gold lace-not as golden as the gold mop cypress but rather a mix of green and gold and bit more whispy in the garden.    Those of you who would like a little gold in the garden but not too much would prefer this particular evergreen. 


Deodara Cedar
Last but by no means least are the Cedars.  Cedrus deodara Aurea is  magnificiant golden cedar which steals the show for any area where you have good lighting and plenty of space. This beauty can serve as an "anchor plant for a foundation planting but allow it enough area to grow and make sure the center portion of the tree is planted an average of seven to ten feet away from the foundation (the further the better) to ensure proper distance from the exterior of your home- then enjoy this beauty.  Two other stand alone pieces in the genus cedrus are cedrus atlantica Glauca Pendula  and cedrus atlantica Glauca-both blue in color similar to the blue spruce however less of a "bottle brush" look to the needles as in the genus picea.  The weeping form (pendula) can be used as a foundation planting or in any garden and the later upright form can be used as a stand alone piece where they is plenty or room as it can also reach up to eighty feet in height under optimum conditions.  
Cedrus atlantica Pendula
 (Weeping Blue Atlas Cedar)


I am hoping you have found the information in the above segment both informative and useful. This is the first in a series of three articles on color in the garden.  Parts II and III will focus on the usage of flowering shrubs and perennials to add everlasting color and interest to your landscape.
Author:Lee@ A Guide To Northeastern Gardening Copyright 2010. All Rights Reserved


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Landscape Design Ideas Front Yard Landscaping Ideas



Landscape design ideas | Front yard landscaping ideas

Landscape design ideas | Front yard landscaping ideaswww.GoodFitGuide.com You dont know how to start creating landscape designs ? Are you having trouble coming up with ideas for your landscaping ...

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Earls Court

Went to an exhibition called City Scape which was centerd around sustainable urban design and construction.

It was to talk to people in the industry and see what solutions companies were providing.

Things such as living roofs or exampe showed how landscape architecture and archtitecture can respond to peoples growing ecologoical concerns in a increasingly urban world.
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Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Alyssum

Alyssum

Alyssum argenteum
A dense, shrubby perennial, reaching up to 1.5 x 1.5 feet, that is native to southern Europe.
The narrow foliage is silvery-gray.
The bright yellow flowers are borne mid to late summer.

Alyssum montanum ( Mountain Gold )
A fast growing, low, compact, mat-forming groundcover perennial, reaching up to 4 ( usually under 2 ) inches x 2 feet, that is native to eastern Europe.
It looks great in rock gardens or planted in stone walls.
The aromatic foliage is hairy gray-green.
The profuse, fragrant, bright yellow flowers are borne during mid to late spring.
Hardy zones 4 to 8 ( 3 with snow protection ) in full sun to partial shade on sandy, well drained soil. Loves heat and is drought tolerant. Shear off old blooms after flowering.

Mountain Gold
Profuse bright-yellow flowers, otherwise similar.

Alyssum saxatile ( Basket of Gold )
Also called Aurinia saxatilis. A vigorous, carpet-forming, semi-evergreen perennial, reaching up to 20 inches x 5 + feet ( usually closer to half that ) in size. It is generally used to trail over walls or over the sides of large containers.
The leaves, up to 5 ( usually much shorter ) inches in length, are gray-green.
The very profuse bright golden-yellow flowers are borne during mid to late spring.
Hardy zones 3 to 7 in full sun to partial shade on light, well drained soil. Excessive wetness can kill, it is moderately drought tolerant. Shear after blooming of it will become leggy and thin.
Propagation is from seed or cuttings though most cultivars are grown from cuttings only.

* video found on Youtube


Citrinum
Also called Sulphurea. A perennial, reaching a maximum size of 15 inches x 2 feet, with grayish-green foliage and paler pink flowers

Compactum
More compact in habit, reaching a maximum height of 1 foot, with abundant, bright yellow flowers.

Dudley Neville Variegated
Compact in habit, reaching up to 1 x 1.5 feet, with attractive leaves, up to 5 inches in length, that are gray-green with creamy-white variegation. Flowers are pale yellow. It is grown from cuttings only and stems with all green foliage must be pruned out if they occur.

Summit

* photo taken on April 10 2012 in Columbia, MD


Sunny Border Apricot
Flowers are orangish-yellow; otherwise similar.
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9 1 Architecture language and the environment

9.1 Architecture, language and the environment
Contents list

Sign language: an
architectural response
to Londons heritage

Chinese, English and Spanish are languages. Each has words and a grammar. Deaf people communicate with sign language. Sailors use flags. Dogs bark. If architecture
is to be classed as a language, we have every right to ask what is being said and who is being addressed. The dictionary definitions are as follows:

Language: "a vocabulary and way of using it.

Architecture: "the art or science of building (arkhos, chief, tekton builder).

Charles Jencks, in The Language of Post-Modern Architecture, suggests that architecture is a language that depends on double-coding (Jencks, 1991). It speaks
to fellow architects and to the general public. An oversized door, for example, informs the public of a "main entrance to an important building. At the
same time, a second code can speak to fellow-architects who have moved beyond functionalism and can enjoy quotations, references, literary allusions, witticisms
and arcane meanings. A classical portico on a new office block, for example, might say "I admire the geometrical purity of the classical tradition but
believe it needs re-interpretation for our own time. The second code, which is the subject of Jencks book, operates through architectural styles. Unsuspecting
readers might be surprised by this fact, as they would be if they opened a book on The Language of Electrical Engineering and found a discussion on the
aesthetics of printed circuit boards. In his later writings Jencks talks of multiple-coding instead of double-coding.

9.2 Language and Architecture
Contents list

Westminster Abbey and Houses of Parliament

Shell Building and Festival Hall

...where there was once a gentle discourse between the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey [top photo], there is now across the Thames, the Shell
Building shouting at the Hayward Gallery, which grunts back at a stammering and giggling Festival Hall [lower photo]. (Jencks, 1991).

As Nelson Mandela observed "You make peace with your enemies not with your friends."

Although I have a personal curiosity about the messages that architects send to one another, I can sympathize with any member of the public who does not
share my interest. What matters to the public is the environmental code. As well as speaking to the public and to fellow architects, buildings converse
with the environment. Too often, modern architecture has been environment-unfriendly. "Form follows function was the battle-cry of the heroic pioneers.
Their dream was of glory, of a bright new age in which external form was exclusively the consequence of internal function. Victorian architects, they said,
had been corrupted by stylistic considerations. Modern architecture would be pure, clean and white. Like conquerors down the ages, they focused on their
own objectives, thinking little of older civilizations. Rectangular slabs and towers were marched through the cities of the world. Microclimate was ignored,
along with local building materials, traditions, pedestrians, religion, art, cyclists and vegetation. For half a century, as the International Style marched
on, the environment lost and the people suffered. Jencks gives the following account of a conversation between buildings that front the River Thames in
London (Figure 9.1):

If peace is to dawn, between architecture and environment, new channels of communication must be opened. "Jaw Jaw is better than War War, said Churchill.
Both parties must be ready to talk. Both must be ready to listen. A common language is a necessity. As in any conversation, both sides will have things
to say. Sometimes, it will be an exchange of pleasantries. At other times, it will be a lively debate. Sometimes, the environment will tell the building
what to do. At other times, the building will have the louder voice and the more important message. City buildings should be more urbane. Urbanism could
serve as name for the art of making them so. Jencks notion of a "language of architecture is a step on the road to peace and harmony. Buildings do speak
and can listen.

9.3 Language and Landscape
Contents list

The environment speaks too, in many languages and with many voices. Oliver Rackham compares the countryside to a vast library:

The landscape is like a historic library of 50,000 books. Many were written in remote antiquity... every year 50 volumes are unavoidably eaten by bookworms...
a thousand are sold for the value of their parchment. (Rackham, 1990)

Too often, architects have seen the land on which they build as sheets of white parchment on which to write new projects (Figure 9.2). In reality, every
work of architecture is a conversion of the existing environment. When writing on the parchments of history, new buildings should converse with the stones,
listen to the wind and speak to the flowers. The languages of the post-Postmodern environment are of prime importance. Speaking to ones clients and to
fellow architects are lesser arts.

Fig 9.3 The Kremlin: "Here is power "

Fig 9.4 Brazilia: "The people’s representatives help themselves to the people’s money"

As architecture is public, whatever languages architects use should be translatable into local tongues. It will then be found that buildings have different
messages to convey. Moscows Kremlin (Figure 9.3) seems always to have declared that "Here is the seat of absolute power. Beware. The designers of book
jackets for Kafkas Castle have agreed that it was a high building, raised above the city, without a clear plan and with very confusing elevations. These
are grand examples of talking buildings. Jencks has some translations of the messages that buildings speak. My favourite relates to the great bowl on Oscar
Neimeyers parliament building in Brazilia: "This is where the peoples representatives help themselves to the peoples money (Figure 9.4).

What might a new house in a terrace (Figure 5) say to its neighbours? An exact copy would declare: "This is a wonderful old terrace. Losing the former building
was a tragedy. I am doing my best to be indistinguishable. A design that uses new features but otherwise fits in will declare: "The scale and proportion
of the old terrace was fine. But the old windows and bricks were a nuisance. Sympathetic infill is the best approach to this problem. A postmodern contrivance,
with wholly new shapes and colours, will declare: "The old terrace was suitable for the period in which it was built. The new building should be in the
spirit of our own times. A lively contrast is desirable.

Fig 9.5 Terrace houses – talking about their neighbours (their context)

Fig 9.2 Typical existing site drawing (July 15th 1972)

9.4 Language and Building Design
Contents list

Excellent buildings should speak to the whole environment: to other structures, to the animals, to the plants, to people, and to everything. For the comfort
of their occupants, in hot humid climates, buildings should strain every ear to catch the wind.
In cold climates, buildings need deep eaves, thick walls and as much sunlight as possible. These are internal matters, but they should avert any new International
Style. From a planning standpoint, it is what buildings say to the external environment that matters most. Whole settlements can be designed to bend their
backs to the wind or hold up their hands to the sun. Thick walls say "We believe in the conservation of energy.

For those who can read the language of settlements, oblique aerial photographs should say: "Hot humid climate, "Hot arid climate, "Temperate windy climate,
"Cold arid climate. For those who can read the language of ecology, eye-level photographs of ordinary streets could say "The native vegetation is oak-birch
forest. It would be boring if all the streets said the same thing but, given a choice, it is probable that residents would wish them to convey this message.
In fact, most modern settlements say "We are internationalist. We have passports. We could travel anywhere in the world without being recognized as the
inhabitants of a local culture or land. One hopes that this attitude will die, once the novelty of international travel has worn thin.

Thai houses speak of the hot humid climate in which they are built.

9.5 Language Fauna and Flora
Contents list

To those who know something of birds, an old barn will say "This would make a good home for a barn owl. Some muddy lumps under the eaves of a building
will declare "House-martins live here. The little roof garden outside my study window is very popular with birds, and their presence is a delight for
me. After finding a morsel to eat, they often bring it here, to get away from cats and dogs. In spring they come to collect the wiry stems of Festuca scaldis
-- I think they are better for nest-building than Poa annua or Lolium perenne. In autumn, they come looking for the seeds that are mown off garden lawns.
My roof tells the birds "You are welcome. The birds sing to me in return.

What should a building say to a tree? "We can be friends. Foliage acts as a decorative foil to buildings. In summer, leaves prevent excessive solar gain.
In winter, leaves drop off and allow sunlight to enter. Trees give buildings a sense of belonging.

What should a building say to a river? "I love you. But how? Visually, they should relate to the water (Figure 9.6). Functionally, they should detain as
much rainwater as possible for as long a period as possible. The best way of doing this is with a habitat roof, a grass roof or a roof garden. These features
help to prevent floods. Conventional roofs, with drainage pipes, accelerate the rate of discharge into rivers.

What should a new building say to a national park? "I humbly and respectfully beg permission to take my place at your royal and ancient court. I will follow
your customs and obey the existing laws and procedures of your establishment. So far from making an intrusion, my constant endeavour will be to melt into
the background.

9.6 Language and the Environment
Contents list

What should a new building say to a medieval town? "I love you but.... The higgledy-pigglediness of medieval building makes it difficult to fit in with
ones neighbours inclinations. Instead of copying a predecessors habits, it may be necessary to re-interpret ancient principles in new ways. The resultant
architectural statement may be "I love your colours, I love your proportions and most of all, I love your materials. But I am young at heart and would
like to have more light and glitter. My heart will be of oak, my sides will be colour-washed daub, my roof will be domed.

What should a new building say to a derelict industrial site? "I bring new life to old lands. In natural deserts, developers think first of protected compounds
to protect against merciless winds and empty wastes. In urban deserts, they put high fences around buildings and car parks. Occasionally, this will be
good policy. More often, especially if there is a public interest to be served by redevelopment, it will be appropriate to dip into the public purse and
create the beginnings of a new infrastructure, which can be enhanced by subsequent development. The infrastructural elements could be a wood, a public
path, a cycleway, a hill, a stream or a lake: each will help to structure later growth. An inherent danger in the "protective compound mentality is that
newcomers will follow the pioneers example. Instead of a new society, the result will be a mass of frog-spawn. This is what makes Edge Cities so unlike
other cities.

9.7 "We speak only to the wind"

What should a building say about its occupants? As much as it wishes to reveal. Churches, lighthouses and windmills are classic examples of Talking Buildings
(Figure 9.7). Each has an important role in society and each of the roles deserves to be publicized. Mosques say "God is great. Banks say "Money is great.
The presence of expressive buildings enlivens both landscape and cityscape. They satisfy curiosity and impart knowledge of lifes richness. It is a great
pity when banks, insurance companies, apartment blocks, hospitals, schools and universities all look the same. And if they look different, it is regrettable
if this is merely a consequence of the architects personality. Eco-building is better than ego-building.

[FIGS 9.7, 9.8 ] In the ‘New Zoning’, when development projects learn to converse, zones will overlie one another. Designers and planners will learn to
answer the classic GIS questions (Where, What if and What?) before taking decisions.

9.7 The New Zoning
Contents list

Fig 9.8 In the ‘New Zoning’, when development projects learn to converse, zones will overlie one another. Designers and planners will learn to answer the
classic GIS questions (Where, What if and What?) before taking decisions.

What else might buildings have to say? Plenty. As discussed in the next chapter, they can speak of diverse identities: regional character, geology, soils,
local colours, ethnic history, traditions, industrial history, cultures, religions, architectural styles, aspirations, art, personalities and much else.
A fascinating aspect of the New Zoning is that the zones will not be exclusive (Figure 9. 8). Take the case of a town that sits on a topographic boundary.
On one side of the boundary is a level area of poorly drained clay, traditionally supporting willows and reeds. On the other is a sandy heath, supporting
birch and heather. Plant and animal species can cross the line, but some of them will remain on one side or the other. This should be the manner of our
New Zoning. Distribution zones will overlap, as will areas of identity. Some people will not be aware of the zones. Those without an interest in vegetation,
architecture, street planning, land use or history may be completely unaware of their existence. Others will be able to read these languages. Architects,
planners and designers should learn to speak them.
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Ikebana Exhibit at the Portland Japanese Garden



Portland Japanese Garden Ikebana Exhibitions
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Model Homes Ellicott City



MODEL HOMES - Ellicott City2


* photos taken on April 16 2012

















* photos taken on April 16 2012 in Columbia, MD
* photos taken on May 4 2012 in Columbia, MD


* photos taken on May 17 2012

* photos taken on July 21 2012

* photos taken on Sep 20 2012

* photos taken on May 10 2013
* photo taken on July 10 2013


BEFORE

* photos taken on Feb 2012
















* photos taken on Mar 2012

* photos taken during installation on April 6 2012


MODEL HOMES - Ellicott City2

* photo taken on Oct 8 2011

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