Showing posts with label HARD LANDSCAPE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HARD LANDSCAPE. Show all posts

16 February 2014

ANDREA COCHRAN



ANDREA COCHRAN
Landscape Architect
USA
Find out more here: www.acochran.com

AC is one of my all time favorite designers, who combines bold modernist design with natural forms, plants and landscapes to soften hard edges. She is so uncluttered in her designs, and plays with large open areas to make you feel simultaneously within a garden and also within the landscape beyond its boundaries. She is based and does most of her work in San Fransico, and therefore chooses materials and plants that she knows will be enhanced by the light or by reflections of the sky.
In an interview I read with her (on the American Society of Landscape Architects website) she sights these modernist designers + minimalist artists as an influence on her work: Dan Kiley / Garrett Eckbo / James Rose / Robert Irwin / Fred Sandback 

This is a nice quote from her, talking about a rooftop garden she created for an affordable housing community:

"The point I started with was that I saw this man up there, he had the most beautiful broccoli growing in his two by three foot bed, and I don't know what else was in there, but this broccoli was unbelievably beautiful. He said I come up here and this is my therapy. I can get my hands in the dirt. I was almost in tears. I thought it was the most meaningful thing I'd ever done to just give this guy a chance to just be outside, be in the sun and work with his hands in the dirt and grow something in the five foot square plot. I think it's really worked well. When he's up there working, teenagers come up and hang out. Adults are up there working on their gardens so the teenagers are being monitored. It's not a leftover space, isolated, where things can happen. It becomes this environment that's more of a community, and people kind of watch out for one another".

 
 










12 February 2014

CURRENTLY READING

The Fundamentals of Landscape Architecture
Tim Waterman
2009





FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT II

FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT (b.1867 - d.1959)
Architect / Interior Designer / Designer
USA 

F-L-W also used to design the interiors for his homes and produced some really beautiful stained glass work and furniture. 
When thinking about the minimalist garden, the shapes in the stained glass really stand out. They almost look like garden plans, where the shapes could be planting. When looking at them like that, you can start to see where the ratio of mass and void is so important. I think the furniture would look good in all three gardens. I will look further in to the furniture at a later date.

 





FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT

FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT (b.1867 - d.1959)
Architect / Interior Designer / Designer
USA

Whenever I have creative work to do, I always revisit the work of F-L-W.  His use of materials and shapes has always particularly interested me - the way that he combines natural elements like wood or stone with clearly man made concrete or sharp lines next to water. He also doesn't create a barrier between his architecture and the landscape, managing to blend the two together,  but yet also keeping a clear distinction between them. Clever stuff!


































11 February 2014

PATH PATTERNED RUG

The pattern on this rug makes me think of overlapping paths. I could apply this idea to any of my chosen garden styles - just adapting it by using different hard landscaping materials..


10 February 2014

KANTO SHIGEMORI GARDEN INSTITUTE CO.

KANTO SHIGEMORI GARDEN INSTITUTE CO.
Japan

I can't find much more information on these gardens or this company, but I really like the work they have done. These images cover a few of their projects


 






MIREI SHIGEMORI

MIREI SHIGEMORI (1896-1975)
Landscape Architect / Japanese garden history expert
Find out more here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirei_Shigemori



This is a really important statement for me about the work of Shigemori:

"Shigemori...spoke extensively of the growing estrangement between people and the primordial power of nature, and his gardens are full of hybrid symbols that seek to reveal the cultural and natural histories their sites. Traditional garden forms are reinterpreted with modern materials and attempt to reengage the viewer with the ever developing continuum of Japanese culture".







 

Going to look out for this:

8 February 2014

MINIMALIST GARDEN

The second garden theme that interests me is the Minimalist style. In my opinion it is one of the most difficult garden design styles to execute well, because the elements are so limited that there is no where to hide. I think it would be good though, to practice really limiting my materials and plant options to see what the outcome is.
I also think that this design style will work well with the restricted 5mx7m size of plot that we have for this project - as often urban, roof top and courtyard gardens opt for a minimalist design approach