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Article Title: Residential Architecture Supports Landscaping Design
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: 
Word Count: 756
Keywords: Residential architecture
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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French residential architecture is best supported by an ordered arrangement of 
shrubs and bushes that convey order and symmetry.  The most famous French 
landscaping design is the parterre garden.  Its four-directional cross shape 
creates pathways of gravel through standing walls of green.  From the 
pedestrian point of view it surrounds the individual with the grounded essence 
of life.  From an elevated vantage point of a balcony or second story window, 
it maps out the landscape into living quadrants of greenery.

French gardens are derived from this formal pattern but are more scaled down 
and customized with additional features such as flowering plants and even 
special grasses.  They can be planted anywhere in a yard, whereas the formal 
parterre garden typically occupies more of a central position to a yard or 
segregated portion thereof.

Italian Two Story and Townhomes
Italian residential architecture owes much to the Stoic absolutism of the 
Ancient Roman Empire.  The Romans loved structure to the point it became the 
defining point of their lifestyle.  Modern Italian art and architecture are of 
course, more romantic in essence and a bit freer in form than their Imperial 
progenitors.  

There still remains, however, a good bit of the Roman in many Italian gardens 
and landscape designs a sense of linearity and angular juxtaposition that 
establishes clear boundaries and states of separation where different 
landscaping elements can be focused upon individually and reveled in with great 
detail.

It is a curious blend of discipline and opulence contained within a form that 
speaks of acceptance and sanctuary created by a very old and rich culture whose 
influence has transcended genetic and geographic boundaries as a marker in 
human thought and artistic development.

Modern and Contemporary Homes
Modern and contemporary residential architecture are all about man and man's 
attempt to understand himself in relationship to himself alone.  Other paths of 
awareness and expressions of art position man's evolution either as the 
ultimate outcome of progressive natural forces or some wild red herring that 
suddenly went out of control when he decided to start walking and talking.

Modern landscape design abandons both polarities by attempting to understand 
man in a world that is strictly mental, cognitive, and abstract.  Contemporary 
landscaping design therefore relies heavily on geometric hardscapes, clear 
lines, sharp angles, and curious forms of 3D art.  Only a marginal splattering 
of greenery is allowed on a modern landscape due to a point of view that Nature 
is neither to be coddled or destroyed, but rather somewhat ignored in pursuit 
of the supremely mathematical and rational.

Colonial Homes
Americans love their history as much as their freedom; and colonial residential 
architecture reflects this love with a celebration of the stateliness of Old 
New England Forms and Virginia mansions.  During the time of the Colonies, 
Americans were still fresh out of Europe and therefore looked to Europe for 
guidance in art, music, literature, and residential architecture.  

As a result, Colonial residential design has a great deal of Old World 
formality inherent to its makeup.  However, as with all things American, there 
is always something of a relaxed sense to the design that comes through in the 
little things of the landscape.  

Flower beds do not have to be precise, but they do have to be neat.  Trees do 
not need to be trimmed daily, but they do require maintenance and care.  Walls 
and fountains should rise up more that hug the ground to mirror the archetypal 
columns that symbolize the whole essence of Colonial forms.

Traditional Americana and the Home of the Simple Life
Traditional residential architecture is more of a feeling and an impression 
than an exact architectural science.  We think of tradition in this country as 
ways we ought to live--which in a pluralistic culture leaves a great deal of 
wiggle room for personal belief and expression.

However, there are some things that seem universal to almost every citizen of 
our land, and these are the things that are subliminally represented by the 
keynotes residential in traditional architecture.  More than anything you might 
call this the beauty of simplicity and practicality with a touch of 
conservatism that is also curiously insistent on the option of free thinking at 
the drop of a hat.

As such, the landscape designs that support traditional residential 
architecture consist of very basic elements like gardens, pools, fountains, 
flower beds, patios, and decks.  The uniqueness comes from the consultation 
where actual materials and arrangements of such things are determined by the 
personal values and tastes of the homeowner.

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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