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Garden Design

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Title: Garden Design


1
Garden Design
Designing Gardens as Part of a Sustainable
Landscape
  • Diana Alfuth, Horticulture Educator
  • UW-Extension, Pierce County

2
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Functional
  • Maintainable
  • Environmentally Friendly
  • Cost Effective
  • Visually Pleasing

3
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Consider the function of each portion of the
    landscape
  • Note problems/attributes in the existing
    landscape
  • Evaluate the site characteristics, including soil
    type, pH, light, wind, etc.
  • Decide on your goal and landscape style

4
Garden Design
Garden Design
  • Formal straight lines, plants in rows,
    symmetrical, globes and columns
  • Informal curvilinear patterns, plants in
    intertwined masses, asymmetrical, natural plant
    forms

5
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Locate gardens as part of your overall landscape
    design
  • Create a good turf area, with functional spaces
    and gardens behind the concept lines that form
    the turf shape

6
Garden Design
  • Consider each individual viewpoint when designing
    the gardens and planting beds

7
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • The most beautiful
  • landscapes are
  • designed, not
  • decorated. They
  • create unity by
  • incorporating
  • Principles of
  • Design, including

8
BALANCE
9
SCALE
10
REPETITION
11
SEQUENCE
12
SIMPLICITY
13
VARIETY
14
Garden Design
  • Design beds to keep maintenance to a minimum

15
Sustainable Landscape Design
16
Sustainable Landscape Design
17
Sustainable Landscape Design
18
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • What makes it look good?
  • Human eyes need a place to start
  • FOCAL POINT
  • A focal point is the first thing we see when we
    look at a landscape.

19
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Examples of things that create focal points are
  • Artwork
  • A plant that is different than those around it
  • Structures
  • Birdbaths, birdhouses, birdfeeders
  • Boulders
  • Bare spots
  • Diseased/dying plants
  • Debris
  • FOCAL POINTS CAN CHANGE THROUGHOUT THE SEASONS!

20
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Focal Point

21
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Focal point

22
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Locating Focal Points
  • Any given view of the landscape should have one
    major focal point, and maybe one or two secondary
    focal points. Too many focal points creates a
    busy landscape.
  • Locate focal points 1/3 of the way from one side
    .

23
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Focal Point??

24
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • After our eyes find a focal point, they need to
    go somewhere, and look for lines to follow.
  • Lines can be formed by edging, paths, structures,
    plant masses, plant form, shadows, etc.

25
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Focal
  • point

26
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Lines

27
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Lines

28
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Lines

29
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Lines

30
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Too many lines, or no lines, create a confusing,
    busy landscape.
  • Lines should take the eye where you want it to
    goand keep it in the landscape.
  • Avoid lines that take the eye into the sky, or
    into the neighbors yard!

31
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Before you start thinking about specific plant
    species, to get a good design, you must first
    plan for each plants characteristics, or
    Elements of Design

32
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Elements of Design
  • Primary (visual)
  • Plant type
  • Plant form
  • Plant height/width
  • Plant Texture
  • Plant Season of Interest
  • (including color)

33
Sustainable Landscape Design
Consider both foliage form and flower form
  • Plant Form
  • Arching
  • Upright
  • Creeping/spreading
  • Drooping/weeping
  • Mounded
  • Horizontal branching
  • Columnar

34
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Plant Size (height and width)
  • Consider the plants
  • MATURE, NATURAL
  • size!

35
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Plant texture
  • Visual coarseness/fineness of foliage,
    branching, flowers.
  • A plants texture is relative to whats around
    it, and it may change throughout the season.
  • Plant texture is EXTREMELY important in design,
    and can make or break a landscape

36
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Texture

37
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Texture

38
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Texture

39
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • The finer the texture, the more of it you need.
    Lawn grass is our finest textured plant.
  • Consider textural changes to create a focal
    point, repetition, and variety.

40
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41
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Season of Interest
  • This is how you get a landscape that is
    interesting all yearby planning it out on paper!
  • For each plant, group or mass, think about when
    it will have significant interest, and make that
    work with whats around it, creating focal
    points, repetition, unity.

42
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Season of Interest

43
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • COLOR!
  • Whats the easiest way to choose a color scheme?
  • STEAL AND COPY ONE!!!!

44
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Color

45
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Color
  • Warm colors appear closer, so are good for
    viewing from a distance.
  • Cool colors recede, so are better up close.

46
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Color

47
Sustainable Landscape Design
48
Sustainable Landscape Design
49
Sustainable Landscape Design
50
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Elements of Design
  • Secondary Soil/fertility preferences
  • (non-visual) Moisture requirements
  • Light requirements
  • Hardiness
  • Disease Insect resistance

51
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • On a scale drawing, locate plants in slightly
    intertwined groups and masses, using single
    plants only when a focal point is desired.
  • These groups and masses will help move the eye
    through the landscape.

52
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Next, keeping in mind the Principles of Design
    (Balance, Scale, Variety, Emphasis, Simplicity,
    Sequence, Repetition), assign Elements of Design
    characteristics to each plant, plant group or
    plant mass.

53
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Key plants soften a hard feature in the
    landscape
  • On vertical corners or structures, they break the
    visual vertical line and keeps the eye in the
    landscape
  • They soften large areas of hard surface, such as
    retaining walls or fences

54
Sustainable Landscape Design
55
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Accent plants are a focal pointthey draw
    attention to themselves
  • Could be all year, or only certain times, such as
    when in bloom
  • Accent plants can be a single plant, a group, or
    a mass

56
Sustainable Landscape Design
57
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Plant groups are 3 or more of a species, where
    each individual plant is discernable
  • Often serve as accent plants at some point during
    the year

58
Sustainable Landscape Design
59
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Mass plants when many plants of a particular
    species are planted close enough together so that
    you cant see the individual plants
  • Masses serve to move the eye between more
    important components and to tie a landscape
    together

60
Sustainable Landscape Design
61
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Start with a backdrop! Everything looks better
    with a backdrop! Create one if one doesnt exist
    yet.
  • Then, locate any non-plant focal points.
  • Then, start with your biggest plant or your focal
    point plants. Using your available space as a
    guideline, your tallest plant should be 1/3 or
    2/3 the height of the backdrop (unless the
    backdrop is more than 18-20 feet tall).

62
Sustainable Landscape Design
63
Flower Garden Design
  • How big should your garden be?
  • The width of a border planting should be 1/3 the
    width of the total area.
  • Each height should have an equal amount of
    space within the bed.

64
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • In small areas where other rules dont apply, a
    4-8 foot wide border allows for an attractive
    variety of plants.

65
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • For island beds, be sure they fit into the
    overall concept plan.
  • A good standard size is 8 feet wide, 15 feet
    long, with maximum plant height of 5 feet, but it
    should be in scale to the site!
  • The tallest plant should be as tall as ½ the
    width of the bed.

66
Garden Design
  • For beds viewed from a distance, hold your hands
    out in front of you at shoulder width.
  • Where your hands meet the backdrop is a good
    length for your flower bed.

67
Sustainable Landscape Design
68
Sustainable Landscape Design
69
Know what plants look like all year
70
Intertwine plant groups to avoid lines that act
as inadvertent focal points
71
Sustainable Landscape Design
72
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • Finally, choose specific plant species that match
    the assigned characteristics for each plant,
    group or mass.

73
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • MATCHING PLANTS
  • Emerald Elf Amur Maple
  • Regent Serviceberry
  • Glossy Black Chokecherry
  • Spreading Cotoneaster
  • Beach Plum
  • Compact American Cranberrybush
  • Emerald Triumph Viburnum
  • Diablo Ninebark

74
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • MATCHING PLANTS
  • Birdsnest Spruce
  • Dwarf Norway Spruce
  • Dwarf Balsam Fir
  • Aglo Rhododendron
  • Dwarf Yew

75
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • MATCHING PLANTS
  • Rosy Glow Barberry
  • Evita Weigela
  • Snowmound Spirea
  • Fritschiana Spirea
  • Cutleaf Stephenandra

76
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • MATCHING PLANTS
  • Big Bluestem
  • Red Switchgrass
  • Overdam Feather Reed Grass
  • Red Flame Grass
  • Tufted Hairgrass
  • Fountain Grass
  • Windspiel Purple Moorgrass
  • Strawberries Cream Ribbon Grass

77
Sustainable Landscape Design
  • MATCHING PLANTS
  • Paprika Yarrow
  • Red Beauty Yarrow
  • Fanal Astilbe
  • Luxuriant Bleeding Heart
  • Sweet William
  • Daylillies
  • Coral Bells

78
Sustainable Landscape Design
Enjoy your landscapes!
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