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Landscape Lecture

The document provides an overview of the landscape planting design process. It discusses 8 steps in the process: 1) examining historical precedent, 2) analyzing the environment including climate and soil, 3) exploring design ideas, 4) creating a design vocabulary, 5) composing the planting design, 6) developing a plant palette, 7) planting the garden, and 8) maintaining the garden. The design vocabulary section describes various landscape elements including the garden floor, ceiling, walls, openings, and hallways, and the forms and functions plants can provide in the landscape.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
405 views34 pages

Landscape Lecture

The document provides an overview of the landscape planting design process. It discusses 8 steps in the process: 1) examining historical precedent, 2) analyzing the environment including climate and soil, 3) exploring design ideas, 4) creating a design vocabulary, 5) composing the planting design, 6) developing a plant palette, 7) planting the garden, and 8) maintaining the garden. The design vocabulary section describes various landscape elements including the garden floor, ceiling, walls, openings, and hallways, and the forms and functions plants can provide in the landscape.

Uploaded by

JamiGadi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PLANTING THE LANDSCAPE

Lecture





Jose B. Juson, Jr.
JPT Review Center
LANDSCAPE PLANTING
PLANTING DESIGN HORTICULTURE
ART SCIENCE
Horticulture. The science or art of cultivating fruits,
vegetables, flowers, or ornamental plants.
PLANTING DESIGN HORTICULTURE
ART SCIENCE
DESIGN PROCESS
Planning Before Planting
1. Examination of Historical Precedent
2. Analyzing the Environment
3. Exploring Design Ideas
4. Creating a Design Vocabulary
5. Composing the Planting Design
6. Developing a Plant Palette
7. Planting the Garden
8. Maintaining the Garden
PLANTING DESIGN PROCESS
1. Ancient Egyptian Gardens (260031 BC)
2. Ancient Greek Gardens (480146 BC)
3. Ancient Roman Gardens (27 BC476 AD)
4. Ancient Chinese Gardens (1600 BC1279 AD)
5. Japanese Gardens (5751600 AD)
6. Medieval European Gardens (5001200 AD)
7. Moorish Gardens
8. Gardens in Renaissance Italy
9. The Formal French Garden
10. The English Landscape Garden (17151820)
11. The English Victorian Garden (18201880)
12. The Edwardian Garden (18801914)
13. The American Garden (18401920)
14. Modern Landscape Architecture in America (19401970)
15. The Environmental Movement (1970Present)
Step 1: EXAMINATION OF HISTORICAL PRECEDENT
Step 2: ANALYZING THE ENVIRONMENT
CLIMATE SOIL
1. Temperature
2. Moisture Conditions
3. Light
4. Wind
1. Moisture and Aeration
2. Physical Structure
3. Chemical Structure
Step 3: EXPLORING DESIGN IDEAS
1. Establishing a Design Concept
2. Determining the Design Program
3. Creating the Design
DESIGN ENTAILS ANALYSIS
Axial Conditions
Circulation
Geometry
Grid
Hierarchy
Points of Transition
Public versus Private Space
The Borrowed View
Figure and Ground
Axial Conditions AXIS. An imaginary line about which a form, area, or plane is organized.
Circulation
CIRCULATION. Represents design elements of both movement and rest,
setting the pace, mood, atmosphere, and experience of a landscape.
Geometry
Grid GRID. A system of coordinates used in locating the principle elements of a plan
while creating an understandable pattern.
Hierarchy
HIERARCHY. Refers to the physical form of rank ordering of spaces or
features, communicating value and importance while adding organization.
Points of Transition POINTS OF TRANSITION are loci of change, thresholds of movement
from inside to outside, darkness to light, enclosed space to open space,
grade to grade, movement to rest, or places to change direction.
Structuring Elements STRUCTURING ELEMENTS are physical forms that define space,
create units, articulate circulation, suggest movement, or develop
composition
Public vs. Private Spaces
The Borrowed View BORROWED VIEW describes scenery or elements beyond the actual
design that become an important or integral part of the composition.
In Chinese gardens it is described as jie jing,
in Japanese landscapes shakkei, and
in Italian design as integrazione scenica.
Figure and Ground A FIGURE AND GROUND diagram enables the designer to reveal the
form of the ground plane by darkening the figures or 3-D elements of
the design.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
ELEMENTS OF THE GARDEN
THE FORM AND FUNCTION OF PLANTS
1. Plants create an architectural framework
2. Plants produce aesthetic effects
3. Plants modify the microclimate
4. Plants provide solutions to engineering
problems
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
THE FORM AND FUNCTION OF PLANTS
1. Plants create an architectural framework
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT SIMILAR TO A BUILDING ARCHITECT

1. THE GARDEN FLOOR
2. THE CEILING
3. GARDEN WALLS
4. OPENINGS
5. THE GARDEN HALLWAY
THE GARDEN FLOOR :
Carpet Bedding
The practice of forming beds of
low-growing foliage plants, all
of an even height, in patterns
that resemble a carpet both in
intricacy of design and in
uniformity of surface. Designs
can vary from geometrical
shapes to images and lettered
inscriptions.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
THE GARDEN FLOOR :
Lawn
A land area covered by grass,
usually mown. It creates a
green ground plane whose
shape and design
complements or contrasts with
other features. Lawns form
recreational rooms for
croquet, volleyball, baseball,
lawn tennis, etc.
THE GARDEN FLOOR : Terrace
A raised level of earth, sometimes retained by stone or concrete, with a surface
of stone, brick, turf, pea gravel, ground cover, or a combination thereof.
THE GARDEN FLOOR :
Meadow
A richly grassed area for
mowing or pasture. It can
be composed of open and
undulating grasses,
wildflowers, or wild prairie
plants. It functions as a
transitional floor between
garden and countryside,
provides a setting for
specimen trees, and
creates the impression of
spaciousness.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
THE GARDEN FLOOR :
Parterre
Originally from the Italian
verb partire, to divide; later
the French term parterre
evolved, literally translated
as on the ground. It is a
flat terrace, usually
adjacent to or near a
building, in which foliage
patterns are created from
plants, flowers, or gravel.
Parterres emphasize the
ground plane or serve as a
picture for viewing,
especially from above.
THE GARDEN FLOOR :
Pathways
An ornamental, compositional
and functional component of a
garden. Straight, wide,
rectilinear pathways give a
garden a controlled and orderly
character. Curved, meandering
paths suggest mystery,
discovery, or contemplation.
Narrow paths are likely to
cause visitors to speed up their
pace and bring them closer to
the plantings; wide paths allow
them to slow down and admire
overall views.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
THE GARDEN FLOOR :
Tapis Vert
Literally translates as green
cloth. It is a swath of lawn,
usually rectilinear in shape, used
to strengthen a visual axis or
focus attention on an object. It
can define an edge, serve as a
form of contrast between the
smooth texture of the ground
plane and the surrounding plant
materials, or function as an
element of transition between
buildings and the natural
landscape.
THE CEILING : Arbor
A leafy, shady recess formed by
tree branches, shrubs, or vines
often intertwined on a latticework
or other architectural structure.
The arbor can announce an
entrance, create a change of
pace in the garden by providing a
resting place, or indicate a
transition from one space to
another.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
THE CEILING : Grove
A grouping of trees either planted
or occurring naturally, usually of
the same plant species and
organic in form. Groves for an
enclosure or connection between
earth and sky and were often
considered by the ancients to be
places of mystical and intellectual
power, a sacred place.
THE CEILING : Pergola
An Italian term that means arbor, bower or close wall of boughs. The pergola is
a structuring element that extends the house or wall-like enclosures to the
garden or provides a place for sitting and enjoying a borrowed view. It is a
perfect structure for displaying vines or sculpture or for dining alfresco.
GARDEN WALLS :
Espalier
From the Italian word
spalle, meaning shoulder
or to lean on. An espalier
is a line of trees whose
branches are pruned and
trained into formal patterns
against a wall, fence or
support structure in order
to make the most of
sunshine and space.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
GARDEN WALLS :
Hedges
Tall, short, narrow, wide, angular, or
serpentine a hedge can form a wall as the
backdrop for sculpture or herbaceous
plantings, create an edge, or emphasize the
outline of a design. A single plant may
appear as an object on the landscape, while
several of the same plant spaced at broad
intervals suggest a boundary but permit
transparency and many planted closely
together create a solid hedge or wall.
Palisade
A row of closely planted trees
or shrubs clipped into a green
wall. It creates an outdoor
architectural feature.
Treillage
A French term meaning trelliswork, a traditional
garden craft featuring latticework construction.
It generally implies a sophisticated lattice that is
architecturally significant.
OPENINGS : Arbor OPENINGS : Arch
An arbor announces an
entrance and indicates a
transition to another space
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
An arch is a curved structure
generally surmounting and
connecting two uprights.
OPENINGS : Gate OPENINGS : Trellis
A gate is an opening in a wall,
fence, or hedge that controls the
point of transition from inside to
outside.
A trellis can announce an
entrance and provide a
window into another realm of
the garden.
GARDEN HALLWAY:
Hedge
A hedge is a row of closely
planted shrubs or low-growing
trees forming a fence, wall or
boundary. As a hallway
marker it directs movement
through the garden.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
GARDEN HALLWAY:
Allee
An allee is a walk bordered by
trees or clipped hedges in a
garden, park or street. The
spacing, scale, and choice of
plant materials control the
visitors experience of the
allee. By linking landmarks,
entries, or gathering places,
allees can control the
dynamics of the garden and
the pacing of the procession.
GARDEN HALLWAY:
Border
A border is a planting bed,
usually linear in form, made
up of layers of plant material
that one walks beside. It
shapes space, define an
edge, provides direction, or
links two or more spaces.
Step 4: CREATING A DESIGN VOCABULARY
GARDEN HALLWAY:
Pleached Walkway
A pleached walkway is a row
of closely planted trees
trained to form a continuous
narrow wall or hedge. The
effect is accomplished by
interlacing the branches of the
trees and keeping their sides
tightly pruned. A pleached
walkway can be used
architecturally for circulation,
as a boundary to define a
garden room, or as a
transitional device between
garden areas.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
5 FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF
PLANTING DESIGN COMPOSITION

1. LINE the essence of plant form
2. FORM the overall outline or silhouette of a plant
3. MASS 3-dimensional grouping of plants
4. TEXTURE the surface qualities of plants
5. COLOR the reflection of the different bands of light
on an object
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN ELEMENTS RELATED
TO PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Balance
Emphasis
Proportion
Repetition
Rhythm
Scale
Sequence
Simplicity
Symmetry
Variety
ELEMENTS = Physical aspects
COMPONENTS = Abstract part
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Balance results from the placement of an object (plant) or objects
along an imaginary or real axis in a landscape composition. When
mass is distributed equally on both sides of the axis, a composition is
said to be in balance.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Emphasis differentiates the more important from the less important.
It is created by increasing the dominance of certain elements and the
subordination of minor elements.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Proportion refers to the actual size of an object or its size relative to
another object. Proportion exists the moment two objects are put
together. Absolute proportion is the size or scale of an object.
Relative proportion is an objects perceived size in relationship to
another object in space.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Repetition is the placement of the same or similar form, texture, or
color over and over again. It results from placing like things together,
enabling the mind to comprehend a composition. There are varying
degrees of repetition. Repeating a plant form produces architectural
walls, hallways, or floors. Repeating a line creates movement.
Repeating a color can make a small space appear larger.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Rhythm is a patterned repetition of a design principle at regular or
irregular intervals. As a design tool, it creates a sequence of
movement or pattern in the garden. Rhythm of form, color, or texture
intensifies the plant composition.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Scale is the perception of an objects size based
on its relation to the human body or relation to
another object. Garden design must have both
absolute or relative scale. Absolute or human
scale refers to the relationship between the viewer
and the landscape. Relative scale establishes the
apparent size of an object or space produced by the
actual size of its parts. The scale of one part to
another and each part to the whole is significant.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Sequence arranges the design so that the viewers attention moves
in a distinct way. It is uniform change, movement, or transition of
the design leading in some direction or to some desired end. It
connects design principles because movement from one part of the
composition to another can be created through change in form, color,
texture, position, or size of plant.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Simplicity is restraint, moderation, and fitness of design. These
qualities give permanence to the work of great architects and
landscape architects. The adage: less is more.
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS

Symmetry is the similarity of size , form, and arrangement of
parts on opposite sides of a plane, line, or point. Symmetrical
design implies order and control and organizes landscape
through the use of balance and repetition.

Asymmetry is simply when garden features are not
symmetrical or identical on two sides of a plane, line, or point. It
is an organizational tool of composition based on balance and the
sequence of movement about an imaginary axis.
Symmetry
Asymmetry
Step 5: COMPOSING THE PLANTING DESIGN
PRINCIPLE DESIGN COMPONENTS
Variety is the diversity of design qualities in a composition. It is the
change or contrast in one or two of the design principles - line, form,
texture, or color - that holds the observers attention. Variety is the
opposite of repetition.
Step 6: DEVELOPING A PLANT PALETTE
CRITERIA FOR SELECTING THE PLANT PALETTE
1. Functional Requirements
The Plants Trees; Shrubs; Ground Covers
Annuals, Biennials, and Perennials
Bulbs and Climbing Plants
Seasonal Effects
2. Horticultural Requirements
Light Requirements
Soil and Moisture Requirements
3. Maintenance Requirements
Step 7: PLANTING THE GARDEN
SUCCESSFUL PLANTING DEPENDS
ON SEVERAL FACTORS

1. SITE PREPARATION
2. QUALITY OF PLANTING STOCK
3. TIME OF YEAR PLANTING TAKES PLACE
4. ON-SITE PLANT PLACEMENT
5. PLANTING METHOD
6. INITIAL MAINTENANCE
Step 8: MAINTAINING THE GARDEN
FIVE MAINTENANCE TASKS

1. WATERING
2. FERTILIZING
3. PRUNING
4. WEEDING
5. MONITORING AND CONTROLING
INSECTS AND DISEASE

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