Lexicon of Garden and Landscape Architecture

Lexicon of Garden and Landscape Architecture
Author: M. J. Vroom
Publsiher: Birkhäuser
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2006-03-17
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: UOM:39015064711016

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"In the lexicon of garden and landscape architecture, Professor Meto J. Vroom gets to the heart of over 250 key landscape concepts. Through definition, illustration and reference to the essential literature, he delineates and expands the theoretical framework of his discipline, thereby opening a fascinating gateway towards understanding change in our urban and rural landscapes. This work will prove an indispensable point of reference for all those involved in landscape architecture - practitioners and amateurs alike."--BOOK JACKET.

Lexicon of Garden and Landscape Architecture

Lexicon of Garden and Landscape Architecture
Author: Meto J. Vroom
Publsiher: Birkhäuser
Total Pages: 351
Release: 2010-07-15
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 3764393270

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This lexicon serves to clarify important terms and expressions that designers use on a daily basis. More than that, it also constitutes a general introduction to the major themes of landscape design.

A Dictionary of Landscape Architecture

A Dictionary of Landscape Architecture
Author: Baker H. Morrow
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 400
Release: 1987
Genre: Landscape architecture
ISBN: UOM:39015013168029

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Keywords in American Landscape Design

Keywords in American Landscape Design
Author: Therese O'Malley,Elizabeth Kryder-Reid,Anne Helmreich
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 724
Release: 2010
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 0300101740

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This beautifully illustrated historical dictionary of landscape design vocabulary used in North America from the 17th to the mid-19th century defines a selection of one hundred terms and concepts used in garden planning and landscape architecture. Ranging from alcove, arbor, and arch to veranda, wilderness, and wood, each term presents a wealth of documentation, textual sources, and imagery. The broad geographic scope of the texts reveals patterns of regional usage, while the chronological range provides evidence of changing design practice and landscape vocabulary over time. Drawing upon a wealth of newly compiled documentation and accompanied by more than 1,000 images, this dictionary forms the most complete published reference to date on the history of American garden design, and reveals landscape history as integral to the study of American cultural history.

Garden Plots

Garden Plots
Author: Shelley Boyd
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2013-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780773588707

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A path-breaking study of the domestic garden in Canadian literature.

Healing Spaces Modern Architecture and the Body

Healing Spaces  Modern Architecture  and the Body
Author: Sarah Schrank,Didem Ekici
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2016-07-15
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9781317123460

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Healing Spaces, Modern Architecture, and the Body brings together cutting-edge scholarship examining the myriad ways that architects, urban planners, medical practitioners, and everyday people have applied modern ideas about health and the body to the spaces in which they live, work, and heal. The book’s contributors explore North American and European understandings of the relationship between physical movement, bodily health, technological innovation, medical concepts, natural environments, and architectural settings from the nineteenth century through the heyday of modernist architectural experimentation in the 1920s and 1930s and onward into the 1970s. Not only does the book focus on how professionals have engaged with the architecture of healing and the body, it also explores how urban dwellers have strategized and modified their living environments themselves to create a kind of vernacular modernist architecture of health in their homes, gardens, and backyards. This new work builds upon a growing interdisciplinary field incorporating the urban humanities, geography, architectural history, the history of medicine, and critical visual studies that reflects our current preoccupation with the body and its corresponding therapeutic culture.

Exploring the Visual Landscape

Exploring the Visual Landscape
Author: Steffen Nijhuis,Ron van Lammeren,Frank van der Hoeven
Publsiher: TU Delft
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2011-09-01
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9781607508328

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It offers clues for visual landscape assessment of spaces in cities, parks and rural areas.

Overgrown

Overgrown
Author: Julian Raxworthy
Publsiher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 393
Release: 2023-08-01
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780262547123

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A call for landscape architects to leave the office and return to the garden. Addressing one of the most repressed subjects in landscape architecture, this book could only have been written by someone who is both an experienced gardener and a landscape architect. With Overgrown, Julian Raxworthy offers a watershed work in the tradition of Ian McHarg, Anne Whiston Spirn, Kevin Lynch, and J. B. Jackson. As a discipline, landscape architecture has distanced itself from gardening, and landscape architects take pains to distinguish themselves from gardeners or landscapers. Landscape architects tend to imagine gardens from the office, representing plants with drawings or other simulations, whereas gardeners work in the dirt, in real time, planting, pruning, and maintaining. In Overgrown, Raxworthy calls for the integration of landscape architecture and gardening. Each has something to offer the other: Landscape architecture can design beautiful spaces, and gardening can enhance and deepen the beauty of garden environments over time. Growth, says Raxworthy, is the medium of garden development; landscape architects should leave the office and go into the garden in order to know growth in an organic, nonsimulated way. Raxworthy proposes a new practice for working with plant material that he terms “the viridic” (after “the tectonic” in architecture), from the Latin word for green, with its associations of spring and growth. He builds his argument for the viridic through six generously illustrated case studies of gardens that range from “formal” to “informal” approaches—from a sixteenth-century French Renaissance water garden to a Scottish poet-scientist's “marginal” garden, barely differentiated from nature. Raxworthy argues that landscape architectural practice itself needs to be “gardened,” brought back into the field. He offers a “Manifesto for the Viridic” that casts designers and plants as vegetal partners in a renewed practice of landscape gardening.