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Article Title: Entry Gardens Are Extremely Important To Both Architecture And 
Landscapes
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: Landscaping
Word Count: 713
Keywords: entry garden, landscaping
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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Entry gardens are extremely important to both home architecture and general 
landscape design.  They serve as transition areas between indoor living space 
and outdoor landscape designs.   These transition areas are not merely places 
to pass through, but rather they are special landscape elements in their own 
right that contribute a very unique form of aesthetic to any front yard or back 
yard landscape.   They add both decorative appeal and functional living space 
in otherwise unused areas that are too small to be developed into more large 
scale elements, but nevertheless are too large to leave fallow without visible 
diminishment of the landscape. 

The most important decision that the landscape designer makes is to choose 
exactly where to create one or more of these special environments.   Any 
segment of the landscape can be labeled "transitional" from a liberal 
definition of the term.  In this instance, however, transition must be clearly 
evident as a movement from enclosed, restricted space into a more boundless 
feeling of sheer open space (or vice versa).  

In addition to front and back entrances to the home, side entrances also serve 
as ideal locations for this specialized aspect of landscape design.  Typically 
when one steps out of the side door to a home all he or she sees is a 
neighboring house, a fallow piece of empty lawn, or a garage wall.  Adding an 
entry garden here can create transition both from within the home and from 
front yard to back yard, back yard to front.

A motor court or driveway is another excellent place to plant an entry garden.  
Driveway areas, due to their obviously two-dimensional structure and concrete 
constitution, can often look too harsh and one-dimensional on an otherwise 
carefully planned and developed landscape master plan.  However, simply adding 
additional greenery around a concrete slab will help make the driveway and 
parking areas look friendlier to the organic world that surrounds it.   

Common features may include any number of decorative and landscape elements.  
Water features are almost always present in some form.  This can be anything 
from a small reflecting pool to a large, custom, illuminated fountain.  Seating 
is also included in most of almost all of these special environments in order 
to encourage guests to pause, reflect, and enjoy the moment suspended between 
one type of space and another.  

Another very important consideration that landscape architects must always keep 
in mind is the absolute necessity of a sense of entrance.   There are many ways 
that residential landscape designers can go about creating this sense, 
including narrowing down a pathway just before expanding it into either a patio 
or courtyard area, or lining a walkway with shrubs, flowering ground cover, or 
even small trees.  Still another method involves changing the grade of the 
landscape itself.  Simply varying elevation either upward or downward is enough 
to create a sense of drama and arrival.   

Regardless of its size or contents, one thing every entry garden absolutely has 
to have is outdoor lighting.   The dynamic expressions of sculpted greenery and 
integrated custom hardscape can only be enjoyed when they are clearly visible.  
Special up lights, down lights, ground lights, and underwater lights can be 
installed to create both visibility and mood-altering effect.

Due to the fact that most formal gardens are designed in back yards, entry 
gardens in front yards are typically a great deal more formal than equivalent 
environments located behind the home.  This is because front yard entry gardens 
are work to move guests from outdoor space into the indoor space of the home.  
Consequently, they must be focus more heavily on home architecture, feature a 
design build that is precisely to scale with the house, and be characterized by 
geometric patterns that directly introduce the significant structural elements 
of the house.  

By contrast, entry gardens in the back yard are typically much more informal 
and free form in design style.   Because it is not necessary for these forms to 
directly reflect the appearance of the house, more fluidity can be applied in 
their development-provided the final outcome still work on some level to 
compliment architecture and surrounding structures.

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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