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Article Title: How To Design And Build A Koi Pond
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: Landscaping
Word Count: 598
Keywords: Koi Pond Design
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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All over Houston, koi ponds are becoming increasingly popular.  Architectural 
features in their own right, koi ponds are highly unique in both design and 
construction.  They tend to occupy a very significant position on the property, 
and they function as prominent elements within the overall theme of the 
landscape.

Koi ponds are named after the fish that inhabit them.  Koi are a hybrid species 
of carp produced by cross-breeding brown German carp with Asian carp.  They are 
very colorful and have very soft mouths.  They are a benign and docile species 
that will literally eat right out of your hand.  Because koi are very 
sensitive, the ponds that koi inhabit have to be designed with maximum life 
support and safety for the fish in mind.  

The water hast to be carefully filtered and aerated so the koi always have 
plenty of oxygen.  The pond must also be built with a specific depth that will 
keep them out of the easy reach of predators.  Also, the stratum of water at 
the bottom of the pond is cooler than the water near the top, so in the summer 
months the fish have an additional comfort zone available to them.  In as much 
as aesthetic constraints on design permit, special structures can also be built 
to provide the fish with additional shade and refuge.

While a koi pond must work on every level to sustain the life cycle of its 
fish, it must also feature an exceptional aesthetic that catch the attention of 
guests the moment they step into their yard.  A blend of skillful ornamentation 
and patterns of recognizable geometric forms lends an air of prominence to this 
exceptional architectural landscape element.  Many koi ponds are rectangular in 
nature and approximately the size of swimming pools.  

Others can be built as perfect circles ringed with ornamental coping that 
compliments patio stonework and serves a dual purpose of creating shelter and 
shade through an overhanging structure.  On properties that are heavily wooded 
in places, a koi pond can be built to look like a natural body of water you 
would find on a Nature hike through the forest.  Waterfalls and ornamental rock 
formations can even be added to create a backyard landscape that is equivalent 
to a walk through a wilderness park.

Other koi ponds feature designs that range from traditional to the 
ultra-contemporary and the avant garde.  One of the most popular traditional 
styles is the Japanese garden.  The Japanese garden is a multidimensional blend 
of greenery and water, normally accentuated with a cascading fountain that 
looks like a stairway of stone.  In areas of the city that favor more eclectic 
blends of architecture and modern art forms, koi ponds can function as 
contemporary outdoor art forms that combine unique geometric angles, linear 
movement, and custom fountain design.

If you have considered adding a koi pond to your property, you have probably 
already been to many websites that sell do-it-yourself kits.  We do not 
recommend any of these to Houston residents simply because the logistics of 
digging, installing, and aerating a pond is far more complicated that you might 
imagine.  

The clay-like constituency of Houston soil makes it a very tricky environment 
for construction of any kind, and the only way to guarantee a genuine return on 
your investment and a design that last for more than a few years is to hire a 
professional landscape architecture firm to coordinate and manage the planning, 
installation, and engineering of the project from start to finish.

Jeff Halper has a passion for landscaping and landscape design, for more 
information about landscaping and gardening visit http://www.exteriorworlds.com
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