Title: Principles of Landscaping
1Principles of Landscaping
2Landscaping
- The use of plants and inanimate materials to
enhance the utility (function) and beauty
(aesthetics) of an outdoor area
3Value of landscaping
- Manipulate environmental conditions
- Shade, light wind
- Increased property value
- Exercise, therapeutic
- More satisfying living experience
- Increased privacy
- Refuge for animal life
- Control vehicular and pedestrian traffic
- Hide unattractive areas
- Reduce noise
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7Cost of landscaping
- Cost
- Quality of plants, materials
- Procurement installation
- Age/size of plants
- Recurrent costs
- Water, chemicals, mulch
- Time
- Maintenance
- Water, fertilizer, pest control, controlling
plant growth
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9Landscape design
- Surfaces lawns, patios, terraces
- Paths materials (lawn, ground cover, stone,
etc.) - Level changes steps, slopes, retaining walls
- Boundaries walls, fences, hedges
- Structures garden buildings, pergolas, arches
10Landscape design
- Ornamental plants
- Trees, shrubs, climbing plants, ground covers,
herbaceous plants (annuals perennials) - Specimens
11Landscape design
- Garden features
- Kitchen garden, herb garden
- Water features (pond, flowing water, fountain)
- Ornaments pots
12Garden styles
- Formal (clipped hedges, topiary, Oriental, still
water, statuary)
13Garden styles
14Garden styles
15Garden styles
- Themes (color, shape, repetition)
16Garden styles
17Landscape design
- Site
- Needs
- Landscape principles
- Plants
- Materials/objects
18Site analysis
- soil texture quality, drainage
- utility of existing plants
- location of underground and above ground
utilities - good and bad views
- focal points of interest
- negative features of buildings and landscape
- window locations
- aspects of climate (sun rise/set, sun/shade
patterns, wind directions)
19Site analysis - views
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23Needs Analysis
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26W
E
27Elements of design
- Features of plants that create moods
- Color
- Texture
- Form
- Line
28Elements of design color
29Color principles
- Colors influenced by light intensity
- Background color important for effect of
foreground plants - Reds, yellows advance
- Blues, greens - recede
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32Elements of design texture
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34Elements of design - form
- The 3-D shape of the plant canopy
35Plant forms
36Plant forms
37Elements of design line
- Line is a boundary element
- Shape structure are defined by line
38Line
- Curved lines vs. straight lines
39Principles of design
- Simplicity
- Balance
- Focalization of interest
- Rhythm line
- Scale or proportion
40Principle of simplicity
41Principle of balance
42Balance
43Balance
44Balance
45Focalization of interest
46Rhythm line
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48Rhythm line
49Scale/proportion
50Scale/proportion
51Scale/proportion
52Scale/proportion
53Landscape plan
54Design in stages
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56Public area
57Public area
- Driveway
- Shape, paving materials
58Public area
- Planting beds
- Trees form the backbone
- Placement of new trees is critical
- Keep large trees away from house (scale)
59Public area
- Foundation plantings
- Corner plantings
- Line plantings
60Planting bed guidelines
- Edging materials
- Plastic, timbers, stone
- Mulch or groundcover
- Large, curved beds more attractive than small,
angled beds - Mass shrubs of same species, use only a few
species - Avoid lawn ornaments
61Private area
- Shade
- Where when?
- Dense shade trees vs. light shade trees
62Private area
- Privacy
- Fences vs. plants
63Private area
- Deck/patio
- Materials, maintenance, cost
- Timing of sun/shade
64Service area
- Screening
- Vegetable garden
- Cut flower garden
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67Online landscape design resources
- http//aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/extension/homel
andscape/home.html - http//www.oznet.ksu.edu/library/hort2/samplers/S4
.asp
68Selecting plants for the landscape
- Evergreen vs. deciduous
- Categories vines, groundcovers, shrubs, trees
- Size small, medium, large
- Plant adaptability
- Temperature, sun, soil
- Maintenance requirements
- Pruning, fertilization, pest control
- NCSU Plant fact sheets
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71Acquiring plants
- Home propagation
- Cuttings, seed
- Transplant from wild
- Deciduous should be dormant
- Evergreen during new growth
- Mail order
- Large selection, cheap
- Shipped bare-root
- Grown in field, dug up when dormant
- Shipped in moist wood shavings, wrapped in
plastic - Increased risk of plant death (minimal root
system) - Should plant ASAP
- Use Garden Watchdog to preview vendors
72Acquiring landscape plants
- Nurseries, etc.
- Bare-root
- Balled burlapped plants
- Dug and wrapped
- Limited soil base
- Container grown plants
- Propagated grown in a pot
- Minimal root damage
- May be root bound
73Shopping branches
74Shopping branches
75Shopping - crotches
76Crotch damage
77Shopping - Trunk taper
78Shopping roots
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83Shopping balled burlapped roots
84Planting landscape plants
- Fall in the South (Spring ok)
- Digging the hole
- 12 Wider than root ball
- 6 Deeper than root ball
- Amend Backfill
- Fertilize in moderation
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88Planting depth soil types
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90Slicing the root ball
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92Planting balled burlapped trees
93Planting bare-root plants
94Berm for irrigation
95Irrigation of new plants
- Weekly soakings for the first year
- Mulch for water retention
96Mulching
97Tree support staking guying
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99Guying
100Staking damage
101Tree root growth
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103Root deflectors
104Landscaping related careers
- Landscape architect
- Landscape contractor
- Landscape maintenance
- Nursery production