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Article Title: Impeccable Garden Design Is A Blend Of Many Different Forms And 
Patterns
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: 
Word Count: 1265
Keywords: Garden Design
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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Garden design should always be done to scale by a professional with a sound 
understanding of geometry and experience in hardscape plans.  This is because 
so many plantings are installed around horizontal surfaces areas such as patios 
and pools, and because vegetation in general seems to go hand in hand with the 
decorative aspects of custom fountains and outdoor buildings.  

A good working knowledge of plant science helps as well-although a formal 
degree in botany is not required.  What is required is an understanding on the 
part of the residential landscaper that true garden design calls for a great 
deal more than colorful flowers to add experience and value to Houston outdoor 
living. 

This is due to the simple fact that, without exception, greenery is the 
foundational color to every style of garden design.  A professionally installed 
planting will feature multiple shades of green arranged in layers.  This 
prevents the form from looking flat and two dimensional and helps it stand out 
more prominently on the landscape proper.  A number of plant species are used 
to create this range of green hue, including hedges, special grasses, ground 
cover plants, and even small trees.  

Once a foundation of varied greenery is laid, color is then introduced in two 
ways.  Annual color is established with certain ground species with colored 
leaves.  Plants such as begonias, impatiens, salvias, pansies, petunias, and 
cyclamen add depth and variety when intermingled with grasses, shrubs, and 
clipped hedges.  

Next, seasonal colors are introduced through flowering plants.  White is 
something of a foundational color that is common to all garden design styles.  
The amount of white present depends on the style chosen, as does the degree to 
which other colors are added as well.

The style of the garden, as well as its size, determines its location in the 
yard.  Larger plantings almost always occupy a centrist position either in the 
middle of the yard or in the middle of an entire quadrant of the yard.  Such 
styles include traditional parterre gardens (though not necessarily their 
derivatives), French gardens, Japanese water gardens, and English gardens.

Other garden designs work better as linear support elements.  We install them 
alongside of homes, architectural walls, fences, and custom walkways.  Italian 
and Mediterranean styles are two of the more popular types that typically adorn 
the exteriors of homes.  

Contemporary and modern gardens are also used extensively to add a touch of the 
organic to residential architecture, although these types also can be used 
anywhere in a contemporary landscape or courtyard due to the highly eclectic 
and abstract nature of modern landscaping design.  

Still other garden designs are deliberately removed from the surrounding 
landscape in order to create the feeling of a separate realm of experience.  
This is often done for residents who entertain a great deal at home, but who 
also want to create their own private space just for themselves as a couple.  

These areas are typically dedicated to reading, meditation, or quiet 
conversation in a quiet corner of the yard.  Zen gardens and water gardens are 
very popular in these places because they contribute to the sense of Being that 
residents are looking to experience when they go to their own special place in 
the back yard.

Other areas where gardens may be liberally planted at will include outdoor 
rooms, hide spaces, tree houses, and garden overlooks that are separate from 
the home.  Many of these garden designs are not based on any particular 
cultural theme or aesthetic form, but are rather the custom creation of the 
landscape designer.  

Again, this is where a good working knowledge of geometry comes into play.  
Custom gardens around places like private patios and morning fountains are 
based on correlative forms that work to extrapolate architectural keynotes into 
open space, transforming them into organic sense in the process.

The choice of a specific garden design is always based on relationship.  When 
we say relationship we mean reflection and counterpoint to corresponding 
landscape elements whose significance and size constitute the essence of the 
landscaping theme.  

The home is the most preeminent of these, occupying a central position on the 
property and functioning as an emblematic symbol of lifestyle and resident 
character.  Trees are also very important elements to factor into a landscape 
master plan because they literally form the pillars of the landscape.  

Gardens planted in proper relationship to trees help balance the vertical and 
horizontal perspectives of the yard and create an aesthetic of multidimensional 
organic vibrancy.

Whenever water features of any kind are developed on a property, garden design 
should also intentionally compliment them.  Swimming pools, natural ponds, 
ornamental waterfalls, and custom water fountains all benefit tremendously by 
the addition of a garden to their outlying boundaries.  

After all, water and vegetation occur side by side in virtually every 
environment in the world.  Cultivating an innately natural relationship with 
deliberate planning and design techniques helps magnify the presence of life 
and vitality that Exterior Worlds works to create for each and every client.

In addition to magnifying the living elements of the landscape, vegetation and 
flowers help magnify hardscapes as well.  Hardscapes can cover up to 70 percent 
of the surface area in a yard, so they represent a grouping of elements that 
demand attention for the sake of aesthetic magnification.  

Most hardscapes are either stone or concrete and basically horizontal in form.  
However, iron and wood structures-such as trellises, arbors, and fences-are 
also technically classified as arbors.  Vegetation is needed around each of 
these forms in order to create a sense of unity between the natural and the 
manmade. 

In the case of wood and stone, vegetation is also reminiscent of corresponding 
relationships between plants, rocks, and trees in the natural world.  In the 
case of concrete and iron work, vegetation softens the appearance of what may 
otherwise look like a harsh protuberance in an otherwise pristine scene.  

Additionally, some hardscapes like walkways and driveways can even be given a 
sense of movement by garden design.  Plantings along the sides of these 
surfaces can be used to signify traffic patterns for both pedestrians and 
vehicles.  This is particularly beneficial along any surface traveled at night, 
where landscape lighting illuminates garden elements as living signposts 
pointing the way to the many points of interest found throughout the landscape.

There is also an unseen, but equally important, aspect to garden design, and 
that is irrigation and drainage.  Although Houston enjoys a very humid climate, 
rains are very sporadic and not to be depended on for the watering of plants.  
A professionally designed and automated irrigation system has to be built in 
the yard in order to ensure the viability of organic forms.  This system must 
be both workable and concealed, because the visible presence of pipes and 
sprinklers will quickly diminish the aesthetic.

A concealed drainage system is also needed to remove the excess water produced 
by irrigation pipes, and to protect the yard from flooding during those times 
when it does rain.  Although Houston has a very effective storm sewer system 
that does a good job of draining flood waters remarkably quickly (considering 
our near-sea level elevation and absolutely flat terrain), getting the water 
out of the garden and into the storm sewer to begin with is another matter.  

Again, only professionals trained in advanced landscape architecture methods 
can create such a system without giving away its presence to the naked eye.

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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