Create a Landscape That Really Squares Up
by Frank Organ · 11 photos · one comment
Create Design Cohesion
In contemporary gardens it can be important to reflect the style of adjacent buildings. It is here where geometric shapes, such as squares, can come into play.
This highly geometric building is complemented by its checkerboard garden. The angular lines in the windows and metalwork are echoed in the long, paved walkway and alternating squares of baby's tears (Soleirolia soleirolii) and pebbles.
by Ron Herman Landscape Architect
In contemporary gardens it can be important to reflect the style of adjacent buildings. It is here where geometric shapes, such as squares, can come into play.
This highly geometric building is complemented by its checkerboard garden. The angular lines in the windows and metalwork are echoed in the long, paved walkway and alternating squares of baby's tears (Soleirolia soleirolii) and pebbles.
A closer look at the design shows how the effect has been achieved. The paving, planting and pebbles in a seemingly random pattern are much like the abstract style of 20th-century artist Piet Mondrian.
To keep the squares crisp, metal or wood edging prevents the greenery from encroaching on the paving and keeps pebbles in place.
by Ron Herman Landscape Architect
To keep the squares crisp, metal or wood edging prevents the greenery from encroaching on the paving and keeps pebbles in place.
Create Space Through Order
Squares, above all, are satisfying in their basic simplicity and symmetry. Carefully spaced, clean, light-colored square pavers create a serviceable pathway and also make this area seem larger. The path also works by leading the eye along to features in the garden that are farther away.
by Banyon Tree Design Studio
Squares, above all, are satisfying in their basic simplicity and symmetry. Carefully spaced, clean, light-colored square pavers create a serviceable pathway and also make this area seem larger. The path also works by leading the eye along to features in the garden that are farther away.
This contemporary seating area, composed of tightly jointed cast concrete slabs, once again employs the trick that large, uniform pavers can make a space feel larger.
by Outdoor Elements
In contrast, wide squares of grass can be demarcated through the use of narrow strips of natural-colored paving. This makes the space seem larger and also provides an interesting contrast of textures between the rough grass and smooth paving.
by The Design Build Company
Create Movement With Diagonals
Though these square pavers have been laid in regular lines, the eyes are tricked at certain viewpoints by the tilting of the squares. This tilting also creates sight lines leading to the house in the distance.
Tip: The paving is set just below the level of the grass to make the grass easier to mow straight over.
by www.KarlGercens.com
Though these square pavers have been laid in regular lines, the eyes are tricked at certain viewpoints by the tilting of the squares. This tilting also creates sight lines leading to the house in the distance.
Tip: The paving is set just below the level of the grass to make the grass easier to mow straight over.
Traditional Landscape
Once again we see the squares turned to the diagonal, which helps lead the eye through the garden.
Wide dividing strips between the gravel serve not only to separate the squares and control the gravel, but to accentuate the geometry of the squares.
by Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture
Wide dividing strips between the gravel serve not only to separate the squares and control the gravel, but to accentuate the geometry of the squares.
The squares we work into our designs don't always have to be in two dimensions. Floating deck squares up to a larger deck create a feeling of movement here. Alternating the direction of the timber planks enhances this sense.
by Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture
Create Visual Delight With Patterns
Sometimes squares can be used just for the delight of the patterns they can make. Here buff-colored pavers separated by strips of turf make a practical yet stunning statement in this front garden.
by Jeff Blakely,ASLA
Sometimes squares can be used just for the delight of the patterns they can make. Here buff-colored pavers separated by strips of turf make a practical yet stunning statement in this front garden.
The repetition created by using squares within squares can be very pleasing to the eye. The wide edging of these beds accentuates the square and frames the formal, almost architectural, plantings within.
The strength and simplicity of the square appears perfect when it is used as a planter or raised bed, where it balances the loose plantings beyond.
More: Geometry Roots Great Garden Design
by Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture
The strength and simplicity of the square appears perfect when it is used as a planter or raised bed, where it balances the loose plantings beyond.
More: Geometry Roots Great Garden Design
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