Landscape Architecture
Landscape Architecture
Landscape Architecture
1. BOG/ MARSH GARDEN - Water logged soil for plants that thrive in those conditions (sedges, reeds)
often beside ponds or lakes.
2. COTTAGE GARDEN - Mixture of ornamental and productive plants seemingly haphazardly arranged
often with cluttered effect, typically as surrounds to small houses.
3. COURTYARD GARDEN - May have no or limited planting material; often has spatial function that
extends the inside to the outside or can be inaccessible and provide visual display or as lightwell.
4. FLOWER GARDEN (CUT-FLOWER GARDEN) has primary purpose that is ornamental but may also
be a productive source of cut flowers/foliage for use inside houses.
5. INDOOR GARDEN - similar to courtyards (which are open to sky) but indoors means under the roof,
albeit glass or plastic; includes internal green walls.
6. KITCHEN GARDEN; WALLED GARDEN - productive gardens for food (fruit, vegetables, salad
greens, herbs, etc.)
7. KNOT GARDEN - intricate hedging that create knot patterns as a version of a parterre; Renaissance idea
that is highly labour intensive to maintain.
CLASSIFICATION BASED ON SCALE: LANDSCAPE
A broader scale, not necessarily bounded, often in the public realm, with plants (cultivated and remnant
natural vegetation) also providing spaces for various useful functions, events and activities.
1. MARKET GARDEN commercial productive garden for food crops that greengrocers would sell,
especially salad greens, herbs and vegetables
2. ORCHARDS are productive plantations of fruiting crops, mostly trees arranged in regular layout.
3. PUBLIC PARK accessible open space, government owned for all to enjoy, mostly recreational uses, also
aesthetic values, can range from remnant natural vegetation to formal gardens.
4. CONTAINER PLANTING on big scale (on top of underground car parks around buildings) with no
access to ground soil or water..
5. RAIN GARDEN slows and filters overland storm water so it can seep into ground not down a drain; bog
garden plants used often here.
6. ROOF GARDEN a large scale version of container planting; with medium height canopies. Grassed
roofs are usually for the benefits insulating heat/cold inside not for walking about or other activities.
7. TERRACE GARDEN as distinct from podium planting, terrace gardens can have access to real soil and
ground water while much of the space is paved over for other functions than growing plants.
8. WALL GARDENING rough stonework or rockwork that allows small herbaceous plants to grow in the
gaps between rocks or spill over the face of the wall from beds located on top of retaining walls.
9. WILD GARDENING 19th century idea about naturalizing bulbs under deciduous (fruit) trees or mixed,
randomly arranged plantings simulating woodlands with upper and understory plantings and sinuous
paths through the plantations
CLASSIFICATION BASED ON EVOLUTIONARY PATTERNS OF DESIGN FORM
UTILITARIAN TRADITIONS
Refer to the historical evolution of designing the gardens. Among the various styles a broadly used patterns
were
1. Formal Gardens
2. Informal Gardens
3. Freestyle Gardens
The Utilitarian Traditions formed the inception of landscape design, where people planted in rows or a
defined pattern. The Utilitarian Gardens can be classified into:
1. PRODUCTIVE GARDENS - orchards, herb and vegetable gardens, and cut-flower gardens) were (and
are) usually arranged in a utilitarian manner. They are arranged in a pattern to accommodate maximum
planting
2. SYSTEMATIC GARDENS - which contain collections of plants arranged according to a variety of
scientific, geographic or other concerns (e.g. taxonomical systems) like experimental breeding for
horticultural or botanical matters rather than artistic aspirations or aesthetic purposes. Eg. Botanical
Garden, Arboretum, Bambooserie, Fernery, Rosary, Vineyard, etc.
CLASSICAL TRADITIONS
Represent the Regular and Formal Arrangement of the Historical and Contemporary Gardens
Ancient Egypt/ Greek/ Roman Gardens, Medieval Gardens, Traditional Persian and Islamic Gardens, Italian
Renaissance Gardens, French Gardens, Beaux Arts / Classicism of 19th century, Classicism of 20th and 21st
centuries
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Irregular layout - attempt to re-create or imitate natural forms and lines
May be controlled, artificial, and 'unnatural' they might be in reality.
2 TYPES OF GARDENS
Garden that is self monitoring and self sustaining establishes its own ecological balance
Gardens that require human intervention to maintain their character.
Some contemporary Garden types are Cottage Gardens, Tropical Gardens, Australian (bush) Gardens, Natural
Style Gardens, Ecological planting, etc.
CONTEMPORARY MOVEMENTS
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Huge diversity of approaches being explored at present
Conservation (natural and cultural), environmentalism and sustainability generally have become
important underpinnings
Ideas of the Contemporary Landscape has come from various sources, the inception being the influence of
Art Theory and Art Movements on contemporary planting design.
CLASSIFICATION BASED ON BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Rural and urban landscapes are, by their very nature, highly modified environments and consequently may
struggle to maintain populations of native fauna and flora. The main cultural features that alter the natural
landscapes are:
LAND USE - Patterns made by people as they use the land for mining, farming, forestry etc. Altering the
vegetation by clearing forests to make pasture
TRANSPORT FEATURES - Networks of roads, railways, canals, shipping lanes, airports etc. known as
infrastructure
POPULATION AND SETTLEMENT - Patterns of population, its distribution and the location of
settlements, such as farmsteads, villages, towns, cities, etc.
The CONCEPT OF URBAN OPEN SPACE is traditionally used to embrace public spaces, parks, squares,
streets, boulevards, natural parks, surplus areas, left over areas, abandoned industrial or urban sites, etc.
Stresses on a more comprehensive and holistic view on the open spaces and
Requires structuring or restructuring of the city.
Landscape is planned, designed or shaped to convey human intention and it is affected by the social, physical
and natural context in which it is embedded.
URBAN LANDSCAPE
Planned areas of green built within enclosed spaces terraces, within compounds, balconies, etc. for a
specific purpose
Scale can vary from a terrace garden to large landscaped lawns for corporate offices, hotels and
apartments
Also refers strip planting or roadside planting for shade
High aesthetic value defined by neat lines and geometrical shapes
Accompanied by built structures semi-open spaces, plazas, amphitheatres, places for people to relax,
etc.
Planned use of plants categorised according to shape size and colours to look pleasing
Clubbed with water bodies and hardscape to create a pleasing composition
Generally clubbed with other activities fun inducing, sandpits, dining, etc.
Designed to suit the type of occupancy they are set within
In city level context, can be planned as an open lung space large urban parks, water gardens, botanical
gardens, etc.
Develops a limited ecological interface due to its modified environment
Levels and compositions in design artificially achieved
RURAL LANDSCAPE
The rural landscape includes a variety of geological and geographic features such as cropland, forests,
deserts, swamps, grasslands, pastures, rivers and lakes.
A large part of the land is converted to farms and fields, however, also retains a natural element in its
landscape
Supports a diverse ecology that also contributes to the socio-economic systems required for human life
Unenclosed, reaches out to hectares of land
Fields separated by hedge row planting, boulevards, etc.
Uneven lines, does not follow a set pattern of geometry, land to be cultivated usually follows the terrain
on which it is setLess built up spaces, infrequent roadways, and infrastructure
Unplanned use of plants categorised according to shape size and colours to look pleasing, mostly use
the native plants according to its needs
Water bodies form a part of the larger picture, planned elements could be farm ponds or tanks built for
utilitarian purpose
The biodiversity is richer in the rural landscape and the interaction between the different elements of
landscape seems more natural.
Principles of drainage and climatic forces are planned to work in tandem with agriculture
Respect for the natural systems that sustain the ecology of the land and the forces that work with it
DEGRADED/ RECLAIMED LANDSCAPE
These refer to the abandoned Industrial and Mining sites, which have been robbed of its natural ecological
value due to human activities.
These lands do not have any vegetation apart from sparse scrub lands
Contaminated and toxic resources, it affects the environment and people around.
An attempt to reclaim degraded land would mean to restore it back to a more natural form.
It follows a step by step procedure and requires atleast 5 10 yeards to complete.
CHARACTERISTICS
Defined edges
Examples:
Asymmetrical Appearance
topiaried).
natural landforms.
Examples:
CHARACTERISTICS
elements.
elements also
minimalism.
Rain gardens not only protect the quality of water but also welcome wildlife. A rain garden is a naturally
shallow or dug out depression in the ground designed to catch rain that would otherwise turn into
runoff; and with the addition of native plants, a rain garden can be an attractive landscaping feature.
RECYCLED WASTE SCULPTURE GARDEN
XERISCAPE GARDENS