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Books > Gardening > Garden design & planning
This efficiency-boosting resource gives you fast access to 350 of the most commonly used site construction details. Details for curbs, steps, lighting fixtures, walls, and much more are ready to be copied from the convenient spiral-bound, lie-flat format. In addition, this manual offers you a clear view of each detail both in section and in a photograph of a sample installation. To further simplify and speed up your design and adaptation work, each clear, standard-scaled detail is accompanied by full data on cost, CSI Masterformat reference, applications, installation, intensity of use and substrate constraints, maintenance and climatological requirements, and other relevant considerations. Perfect for on-site consultation or desktop at-a-glance reference, as well as time-saving adaptation to documents, Site Construction Details Manual gives landscape, design, and construction professionals the comprehensive and up-to-date selection of details they need, right where they need it. Any way you look at it, this all-in-one detail anthology is an invaluable on-the-job toolÑone that youÕll definitely want to keep within reach. And its a handy companion to the popular Landscape Construction Details CD-ROM!
A fascinating look at the life, influences, techniques and works of
18th-century landscape gardener Lancelot 'Capability' Brown. His
transformation of unpromising countryside into beautiful parks
changed the face of a nation and created a landscape style which
for many of us defines the English countryside. One of the most
remarkable men of the 18th century, Lancelot 'Capability' Brown was
known to many as 'The Omnipotent Magician' who could transform
unpromising countryside into beautiful parks that seemed to be only
the work of nature. His list of clients included half the House of
Lords, six Prime Ministers and even royalty. Although his fame has
dimmed, we still enjoy many of his works today at National Trust
properties such as Croome Park, Petworth, Berrington, Stowe,
Wimpole, Blenheim Palace, Highclere Castle (location of the ITV
series Downton Abbey) and many more. In Capability Brown, author
and garden historian Sarah Rutherford tells his triumphant story,
uncovers his aims and reveals why he was so successful. Illustrated
throughout with colour photographs of contemporary sites,
historical paintings and garden plans, this is an accessible book
for anyone who wants to know more about the man who changed the
face of the nation and created a landscape style which for many of
us defines the English countryside.
'The nation's favourite gardener' - Guardian 'There was nothing
here that could possibly be described as a garden. But beneath
years of neglect was a blank canvas that I could fill with the
garden of my dreams...' Monty Don invites you into Longmeadow, a
place that has become synonymous with Gardener's World, to show how
he creates and tends his own garden, and how you can bring some of
that same magic to our own. Following the cycle of the seasons,
Gardening at Longmeadow is a year-long diary of Monty's gardening
wisdom: from the earliest snowdrops of January and the first
splashes of colour in the Spring Garden, to the electric summer
displays of the Jewel Garden and the autumn harvest in the orchard.
Alongside his rich, personal experiences at Longmeadow, Monty
describes the individual plants coming into their own in the floral
and vegetable gardens and talks you through key tasks, from
composting and lawn maintenance to topiary clipping and fruit
pruning. The result is a very personal account of failure,
bewilderment and surprise, as well as endless pleasure and some
success over the course of a gardening year. With beautiful
photography throughout, Gardening at Longmeadow is an essential
book for gardening enthusiasts of all skill levels. It will inspire
you to achieve a balanced, healthy garden of your own, that's
spilling with produce and full colour all year round.
"Creating a garden doesn't need to be complicated." This is the
promise from Adam Frost, BBC Gardeners' World presenter and winner
of multiple Chelsea Flower Show gold medals. Create your dream
garden with a practical, uncomplicated approach to gardening that
suits your lifestyle, personality, and budget! Whether you have a
small garden in the city or have hundreds of acres in the
countryside, you can create an idyllic garden in whatever setting
you choose with this gardening guide. This clear and practical
gardening book will show you how to easily design a garden that
reflects your practical needs, lifestyle, budget, personality,
soil, and climate. Here's what you'll find inside: - Work through
Q&A sessions, build mood boards and plant lists, and develop
the essential skills to design, plot, and shape your space -
Step-by-step photography shows you the techniques you need to build
your garden - all the hard-landscaping skills you might need, such
as building a brick wall, laying paving or decking, or installing
fencing or a water feature - You are shown how those skills can be
applied to different garden projects, from creating a seating area
to building a simple water feature. You can mix and match projects
according to your available space, tailor them to your climate and
soil type, and gradually build your perfect garden, bit by bit - A
month-by-month guide shows you how to enjoy your garden space and
checklists helps you with easy garden maintenance and development
Designing your garden shouldn't be a daunting task. This gardening
book will help you understand your space so you can create
something that works for you - your time constraints, your budget,
your family requirements, the sort of plants you like, and the
effect you want to achieve. Following a practical, no-nonsense
approach, this gardening guide strips away complex design concepts
and focuses on your needs to help you find your own garden style,
even if you're clueless about where to start. Discover simple
garden design ideas that work equally well for a complete garden
makeover or an elegant but low-maintenance garden. Create your
perfect garden without breaking the bank, with an easy-to-follow
planting guide that is perfect for beginner and seasoned gardeners
alike.
Widely acknowledged as the most influential land- scape designer of
his age, Lancelot Capability Brown was to England what Frederick
Law Olmsted was to America responsible for shaping the very ideal
of the nation s parkland. Brown s ambition was to bring out of a
landscape the best of its potential rather than impose his own
ideas upon it. His designs are organic, weaving gestures of colour
and perspective into the features that the country already
afforded. So natural are his designs, and so perfectly do they
complement the houses within them, that for many a Capability Brown
landscape is the epitome of the English estate. His gardens and
park- lands as much as the houses themselves would become icons of
British country life. Published to coincide with the tercentenary
of his birth, this remarkable book illuminates fifteen of Brown s
most celebrated landscapes. To love the great English estates is to
love the settings with which Brown surrounded them from idyllic
parklands at Milton and Broadlands to structured landscapes around
iconic houses at Blenheim, Burghley, Wake- field, and Chatsworth.
With photography commissioned for the book, and including rarely
seen archival drawings that shed light on Brown s process, this
book serves as a guide to Britain s most beloved landscapes and an
exploration of the masterful mind behind their creation.
Text in English and German. The architect and photographer Rolf
Reiner Maria Borchard, who is professor of design principles at the
Muthesius-Hochschule in Kiel, has chosen seven of the most
beautiful gardens and photographed them during several trips,
always in spring, in other words at a time when the garden
architecture has not yet been overwhelmed by the vegetation, and so
can make the best possible impact in the image. His trained eye for
the way architecture is embedded in the landscape means that he has
found striking and convincing images, steeped in the harmony of the
gardens.
This book examines the ideal of wilderness preservation in the United States from the antebellum era to the first half of the twentieth century, showing how the early conception of the wilderness as the place where Indians lived (or should live) gave way to the idealization of uninhabited wilderness. It focuses on specific policies of Indian removal developed at Yosemite, Yellowstone, and Glacier national parks from the early 1870s to the 1930s.
This eloquent and powerful book combines poetry and pragmatism to
teach the language of landscape. Anne Whiston Spirn, author of the
award-winning The Granite Garden: Urban Nature and Human Design,
argues that the language of landscape exists with its own syntax,
grammar, and metaphors, and that we imperil ourselves by failing to
learn to read and speak this language. To understand the meanings
of landscape, our habitat, is to see the world differently and to
enable ourselves to avoid profound aesthetic and environmental
mistakes. Offering examples that range across thousands of years
and five continents, Spirn examines urban, rural, and natural
landscapes. She discusses the thought of renowned landscape
authors-Thomas Jefferson, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frederick Law
Olmsted, Lawrence Halprin-and of less well known pioneers,
including Australian architect Glenn Murcutt and Danish landscape
artist C. Th. Sorensen. She discusses instances of great landscape
designers using landscape fluently, masterfully, and sometimes
cynically. And, in a probing analysis of the many meanings of
landscape, Spirn shows how one person's ideal landscape may be
another's nightmare, how Utopian landscapes can be dark. There is
danger when we lose the connection between a place and our
understanding of it, Spirn warns, and she calls for change in the
way we shape our environment, based on the notions of nature as a
set of ideas and landscape as the expression of action and ideas in
place.
THE BOOK IN 19 WORDS: A CANCER PATIENT DISCOVERS THAT GARDENING IS
GOOD MEDICINE - AND FINDS A POWERFUL HEALING PARTNER IN HER OWN
BACKYARD. Jenny Peterson is a breast cancer survivor. Her long road
through cancer treatment was hard, emotional and often deeply
depressing. The one thing that pulled her out of the darkness was
her desire to be able to garden again. Peterson credits her garden
with clearing her mental fog and overcoming her depression,
physical limitations and pain. The Cancer Survivor's Garden
Companion explores the therapeutic benefits of this vital "earth
connection." With gentle empathy, beautiful photographs and easy
how-to steps, she shows others how to create their own backyard
haven for healing - a personal restorative garden - with a bonus of
well-grounded guidance about diet, exercise, mental focus and
spiritual renewal.
Children love to play in risky-often misunderstood to mean
unsafe-ways. It is often how they learn. Research shows that
activities like climbing on trees and boulders, hiking in nature,
and playing in a creek are excellent ways for kids to develop their
creativity and their senses, because playing outdoors evokes
different sights, sounds, smells, and textures. Letting Play Bloom
analyzes five outstanding case studies of children's nature-based
risky play spaces-the Slide Hill at Governors Island in New York,
the Berkeley (CA) Adventure Playground, and Wildwoods at Fernbank
Museum in Atlanta, as well as sites in the Netherlands and
Australia. Author Lolly Tai provides detailed explanations of their
background and design, and what visitors can experience at each
site. She also outlines the six categories of risky-not
hazardous-play, which involve great heights, rapid speeds,
dangerous tools, dangerous elements, rough-and-tumble play, and
wandering or getting lost. These activities allow children to
explore and challenge themselves (testing their limits) to foster
greater self-worth while also learning valuable risk-management
skills such as dealing with fear-inducing situations. Filled with
more than 200 photographs, Letting Play Bloom advocates for a
thoughtful landscape design process that incorporates the specific
considerations children need to fully experience the thrill that
comes from playing in nature.
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