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Article Title: How To Make Expansive Yards Feel Intimate
Author: Jeff Halper
Category: Landscaping
Word Count: 657
Keywords: houston landscape
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.contentcrooner.com
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The feeling of special space and intimacy is essential to the Houston outdoor 
living experience.  On smaller properties such a feeling is a given because 
there is only limited space.  On a larger lot, this is more of a challenge 
because there is so much space that the landscape designer runs the risk of 
creating excessive homogeneity that overwhelms the senses.

Variety is necessary for the spice of outdoor life, we might say.  Breaking up 
the landscape into smaller, more 

The majority of Houston's larger properties are locating in River Oaks, 
Rivercrest, and Memorial.  In this region of the Houston landscape, close 
proximity to Buffalo Bayou and its tributaries encourages heavy tree growth.  

Since trees have a tendency to make a lot look even larger than it is, we are 
especially challenged at those times when we have to create zones of enclosure 
and privacy on a property that is already massive to begin with and which looks 
that much more expansive with the visual factor of the trees.

Some people would suggest removing some of the trees.  We oppose this approach 
because we feel that trees are the pillars of true Houston landscape design.  
Any special environments can be developed around them in tree friendly ways 
using garden design, custom hardscapes, and strategic placement of outdoor 
buildings.  

Such environments can often be created with very simple methods.  Take, for 
instance, the creation of an outdoor room in a garden built around a lighted 
fountain.  Such an outdoor room does not need "wall" per se in the same way a 
room in a house does.  Outdoor rooms typically use plant material to create a 
feeling of warmth and enclosure.

On a large River Oaks estate, something as simple as low-level ground cover 
surrounding a seating area is all that is needed to remove the gathering from 
the overwhelming expanse of the surrounding Houston landscape.  Trees and 
taller hedges can be used to build a wall, if necessary, to shut out the view 
of neighboring yards or the street near the front of the home.   Such simple 
techniques are often all that is necessary to separate a portion of the yard 
for special guests and special occasions.  

Simple hardscape variations can also help break up the large scale of the 
landscape into multiple areas of interest, gathering, and seating.   Patios can 
be built at different elevations, and they can be built around virtually 
anything that can be used as a visual focal point or center for human activity. 
 

Stone patios can also be paved large scale stone that will distorts one's sense 
of perspective and focus the attention of the eye more on the patio than the 
surrounding Houston landscape.  

Outdoor buildings can be built strategically between different points of 
interest to new landscape design zones.   An outdoor living room, for example, 
can be built in a garden that will create multiple viewpoints originating from 
the same space.  An arbor can be built between a luxury swimming pool and an 
outcropping of trees in the back yard to create the sense of separation between 
refined space and more open natural space.

Special ornaments can also enhance both the organic and the inorganic elements 
of landscape design.  For example, one excellent way to give a patio a special 
touch of luxury is to hang outdoor curtains around it.  This instantly sets the 
area within the curtains apart from the rest of the Houston landscape without 
completely blocking off one's view of the world outside.  

In front and back yards where there is a great deal of brick work and masonry, 
large-scale planters can be built to either run parallel to home walls, 
architectural walls, or elevated patios.  They can also be constructed as 
actual parts of more sophisticate hardscapes such as outdoor fireplace patios 
and custom fountains.

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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