Thinking About Landscape Architecture

Page 49

THINKING ABOUT LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE

Small (young) trees grow into large trees. When small trees are planted in a space, the intended impact of the space is minor, compared to when the trees approach maturity and fill in and grow into a canopy, shading the space. Many plants undergo changes with the seasons throughout the year. Deciduous trees and shrubs lose their leaves in the fall in anticipation of the approach of winter. Before the leaves drop, they change color in autumn from shades of green to multitude shades of yellow, orange, red, purple, and brown. With the onset of spring, the leaf buds on bare brown branches swell, gradually turning from pale, light shades of green to increasingly more intense shades of the leaf color they eventually will achieve on maturity by early summer. All these changes are part of a continuum or natural process and it is the knowledge of this process of change that is understood by a landscape architect. This palette of change is considered when specific species of plants are selected and placed in the designed landscape. Landscape architects also consider the metamorphic changes of plants over the span of time when designing spaces and places. As the installed plants mature, the spatial qualities and scale of the designed landscape evolve. Planted spaces become more in scale to the visitors of these spaces, perhaps as spaces where there is a more comfortable feeling. Comfortable in terms of scale and more agreeable spaces to be in as the shading aspect of the trees is realized. Landscape architects will select and place plants to moderate the effects of wind, sunlight, and views. Deciduous trees planted along the face of a south-facing building will shade it and reduce heat gain from the summer sun. These same trees will lose their leaves in the fall, reversing the effects of sun, allowing for heat gain into the building. Plants can serve to screen undesirable views. As the plants grow, their potential for blocking or reducing undesirable views increases over time, eventually providing visual privacy. The physical permutations of change that plants undergo in a year’s time or over tens or even hundreds of years are challenging to learn and for a landscape architect to master. To add a further dimension to the challenge is that each region of a state, provenance, country, and continent has unique aspects of time-related changing, that must be learned and understood. The physical changes from season to season or year to year have aesthetic implications to be learned as well. Horticultural knowledge of the plants and their time-related changes can enhance or moderate some of these changes. The landscape architect at the outset of the design process must account for the ramifications of soil, climate, longitude, and hydrology when developing a plant design palette. With the sound understanding of these factors, more informed decisions will be made with respect to plant species selection and their impact on the designed landscape.

Circulation Circulation (both vehicular and pedestrian) is an element in the landscape that provides the organizing structure for a plan of a new neighborhood, the site design of open space, a campus plan, and any project that has a variety of program elements requiring access, the 28


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2min
page 227

Plants and Their Relevance to Sustainability

2min
page 224

The Role of Plants in a Sustainable Landscape

9min
pages 220-223

Managing Storm Water

9min
pages 215-219

Plants in Combination with Grading and the Environment

2min
page 214

Nature, a Model for Infrastructure

2min
page 213

Grading and Drainage

4min
pages 208-209

Professional Responsibility: Protecting the Health, Safety, and Welfare of the Public

2min
page 206

Design Considerations

2min
page 207

Having Fun with Materials

1min
page 200

Soil

4min
pages 198-199

Fountains and Pools

2min
pages 196-197

Examples of Material Selection to Create a Variety of Results

1min
pages 194-195

Metal

7min
pages 189-193

New Challenges in Plant Selection

2min
page 171

Brick: Another Type of Manufactured Modular Material

2min
page 188

Aesthetic Considerations

2min
page 172

Stone

6min
pages 183-187

Planting Design: From Plans to Reality

1min
page 173

Plant Selection Based on Climate and Other Ecological Factors

2min
page 170

Other Factors Affecting Plant Growth and Survival

2min
page 169

Overview of Plant Physical Characteristics by Region

5min
pages 165-166

Changing Seasons

9min
pages 161-164

Environmental Restoration

9min
pages 154-158

Urban Design

5min
pages 148-151

Educational and Commercial Campuses

2min
page 152

Waterfronts

1min
page 153

Parks

10min
pages 143-147

Gardens

18min
pages 133-142

Low Impact Development and Green Infrastructure

2min
page 130

Reconstructed Watershed Landscape

2min
pages 128-129

Work of Practicality

6min
pages 125-127

Landscape as Art

6min
pages 121-123

Symbolism

3min
pages 119-120

Architectural Inspired Landscape Space

4min
pages 117-118

The Design Concept

2min
page 108

Landscape as Narratives

8min
pages 109-112

Inspiration from Nature

3min
pages 115-116

Sustainable Design

3min
pages 100-102

Modernism and Contemporary Themes

4min
pages 97-99

Early Southern and Northern European Garden Design Traditions

6min
pages 92-95

Dawn of Early Human Habitation on the Land

3min
pages 90-91

Historical Overview of Landscape Architecture

4min
pages 88-89

Phase III: Construction Documents

1min
page 77

Phase V: Construction Implementation

3min
pages 79-80

Notes

2min
page 85

Phase II: Design Development

3min
pages 75-76

Phase I: Schematic Design

11min
pages 69-74

Further Reading

1min
pages 64-65

Scale: Another Word with More than One Meaning

3min
page 46

Agent of the Client

2min
page 47

Cultural Differences in Design

7min
pages 60-62

Circulation

4min
pages 49-50

Elaboration of Further Design Topics

2min
page 48

Sustainability

4min
pages 43-44

Collaboration

1min
page 45

Design with Nature

4min
pages 41-42

Landscape Architects as Stewards of the Land

2min
page 40

When Is Dirt Soil?

2min
page 39

Landscape Architects Must Balance Practical with Artistic Considerations

2min
page 28

Steps to Becoming a Professional Landscape Architect

6min
pages 32-34

Career Opportunities

4min
pages 30-31

Landscape Architecture: A Design Profession for the Twenty-First Century

6min
pages 23-25

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION—WHAT IS A LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT?

1min
page 22

Landscape Architecture: Science or Art?

5min
pages 26-27
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