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花园圣经(精装)


花园圣经(精装)

作  者:(美)芭芭拉博林格, 迈克尔格拉斯曼

译  者:白雪

出 版 社:广西师范大学出版社

出版时间:2016年01月

定  价:258.00

I S B N :9787549574193

所属分类: 专业科技  >  建筑  >  园林景观/环境艺术    

标  签:建筑  通论/工具书  园林景观/环境艺术  

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TOP内容简介

    室外空间的装修设计是当下最热门的话题,它能合理利用资源,扩大室内居住空间,能使周围环境变得美观且更具吸引力。

    本书将带业主从最开始走一遍流程:如何咨询专业人士,如何做预算,如何发现和解决他们的院子里排水、侵蚀、私密性、噪声、风,以及光照多少或阴凉等问题。

TOP作者简介

    作者芭芭拉·博林格,知名房地产设计师、花园设计师兼作家,有40多年从业经验; 迈克尔·格拉斯曼,屡获殊荣的景观设计师和园艺设计师,有超过35年的从业经验,已出版7本景观设计和园艺类图书。他们共同指导你设计完美花园。两人目前正在撰写博客The Bare Root (https://glassmanballinger.wordpress.com/). 深受广大读者喜爱。

TOP目录

6 前言

10 序言

14 第一章 了解场地和气候

20 第二章 做一个预算并坚持

30 第三章 雇佣好的专业设计人员

38 第四章 找到花园的独特风格

56 第五章 兼顾功能性和美观性的室外环境设计原则

72 第六章 开始前应该意识到的问题

78 第七章 激发灵感的好案例

81 禅园

85 不拘一格的室外房间

89 免受蛇扰的花园

93 艺术家的幽静之所

97品味风景

101再生花园

105设计在细节处

109田园农场的重建

113花园瀑布

117实验室

121看:没有草坪

125西班牙殖民复兴的灵感

129灌溉权

133完美引流

137多层次最大化

141景观的演变,从贫瘠到富有

145家居旅游展示

149分工协作

153胜利的喜悦

157后花园的精彩

161自然生态平衡文化的沃土

165林地之星

169食物,花卉,陪伴的灵感

173法则1:打包整体归划

177土地万岁

181家庭娱乐

185水立方

189极简抽象派

193设计一个家庭度假胜地

196第八章

发现灵感—花园旅游,生态花园和世界各地的花园

208第九章

研究有关花园的博客和书籍

212后记

个性化的花园的设计原则

214作者介绍

216致谢

222摄影版权

TOP书摘

LOOK: NO LAWN

看:没有草坪

Almost nine years ago, Australian landscape designer Jim Fogarty and his wife Victoria moved into a brand new house, which gave him a clean palette to work with from the start. Yet, he needed to take into account a neighbor’s two-story house that would look down on his pool courtyard once finished, and a major community restriction that limits non-penetrable surfaces. “That meant that at least 35 percent of the space had to remain as garden beds, mulched areas, but no lawn,” says Jim, whose eponymous firm is based in Malvern, Australia.

Site Problems

Small site needed a clever use of space

Water restrictions meant no lawn since there could be no watering of it

Allowing for a minimum site coverage of 35 percent penetrable surface, such as garden beds

Needed to position a 2,642-gallon (10,000-liter) rainwater tank underground

Needed to be smart about how the pool’s safety barrier was incorporated into the small space

Wish List

Pool

Informal outdoor entertainment

A nice, attractive front garden that alsohelped to provide shade from the hot afternoon sun

Outdoor bar

Front deck area that was more modern in appearance

Finding a Professional

The project was the landscape architect’s own home and site.

Project Challenges

The garden was designed during Melbourne’s tough drought, which added another concern—how would new plantings be watered with stricter rules in place?

Problem-Solving Solutions

Because of the drought and the community’s ban on watering, Jim designed the site without any lawn. He made rainwater a priority to conserve and recycle by installing a 2,642-gallon (10,000-liter) rainwater tank, hiding it under a front deck. To design a green garden that would appear abundant even during a drought, Jim used hardscape materials, including reconstituted concrete pavers and split-faced bluestone cobblestones, all in an interesting pattern whether viewed at ground level or from the second story of his home. In the pool courtyard, the cobblestones soften and break up the small space and make it visually enchanting, almost like a three-dimensional work of art. In fact, he inserted a wall sculpture by artist Valissa Butterworth, which was inspired by wet sand at low tide. To maximize outdoor space, Jim “borrowed” his garage as an extra entertainment space. He changed the garage’s white lights to a more hip, novel red, and at night the garage looks like a submarine with PVC and copper pipes.

To keep the garage and courtyard separate, Jim designed a bar that doubles as a safety wall for the pool, cladding it in double-chiseled lava stone. On another wall, clad in the same material, water cascades down into the pool, creating a shimmering effect at night under blue LED lights. A bamboo pool fence works as a second line of defense, important as a backup since the clients have children. If desired, it can be taken down in seconds as it’s built in three interlocking panels. Even better is that it was built using bamboo that grows in his and his wife’s yard, is a good source of mulch, and can be a climbing surface for other plants in the garden. At night when the couple often entertains, they can turn on lighting, designed by Light on Landscape, a company in Melbourne: blue lights illuminating the lava stone under the bar; red shining down on an outdoor shower. In the front garden, Jim designed a large bed with interesting green foliage and a black-stained floating timber deck with benches by Dwell by Jo.

Who needs a lawn? Not these folk. But they did want additional plantings, which would include ones to screen the neighbors’ house. This was a tough decision because Jim wanted something that would grow tall but not wide, have foliage at ground level so he and his wife wouldn’t have to look just at tree trunks or have precarious limbs

overshadowing their courtyard and stealing sun, and also not create mess for their pool. He decided on black bamboo, planted with root control barriers, along with some liriope, ligularia, bergenia, and ajuga as groundcover to help keep the leaf drop from blowing into the pool.

To make the front garden interesting with lots of foliage plants and cope with not having any lawn, Jim designed a black-stained floating timber deck to sit amid the dense greenery. He used clumping bamboo for height but chose one that doesn’t spread, and underneath it he planted Solomon’s seal, hellebores, hosta, and more liriope. Lights placed under the bamboo create a great show at night from the dining room.

Instead of using color, Jim inserted lots of textures and shapes. He used clipped lineal hedging that contrasts well with clipped balls of Luma apiculate, Viburnum odoratissimum, and Buxus microphylla. He found Bamboo Bambini (Pogonatherum paniceum) to work since it’s drought-tough, can be clipped into rough shaggy balls for definition, and has the most lush lime-green grass—like foliage that helps fill difficult parts of garden beds. He also planted herbs, such as rosemary, catmint, chives, tarragon, parsley, and sage for cooking.

Cost-Saving Alternatives

The use of gravel paths for the side garden would have reduced costs, as would the use of more pavers for an exposed aggregate surface instead of flagstone cobblestones.

Budget

The budget was about 15 percent of property’s value at the time, plus a design fee for others.

Challenges Along the Way

The yard is near a creek, and groundwater from the creek was seeping down the hill and rising to the surface. When the garden was planted, Jim used some plants that could tolerate having their root zone moist until the plants reached enough of a critical mass so they could use up excess water.

Key Design Details

Wall feature by Valissa Butterworth that sits overlooking the pool

Water feature that trickles down the chiseled lava stone into the pool below

The New Garden—An Epilogue

Not only does Jim enjoy the garden, but he and his wife also love the buzz from seeing so many neighbors and strangers look over their front fence as they walk past. The clever use of space has added to their lifestyle. “What I love about the bar is the ability to entertain in a very casual manner in reflection of my wife’s time spent living in Dubai. We la

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