waterfall landscape design
waterfall landscape design
waterfall landscape design
waterfall landscape design

Private Back Yard Garden Near Chautauqua

Bendele Garden Water Photo

Chautauqua Area Garden Design

This landscape design is a tiny little garden near Chautauqua Park in Boulder, Colorado. The Chautauqua area has been a great area for us: we’ve done at least a half dozen garden designs, ranging from really big to very small, in the Chautauqua neighborhood. A big part of the garden is water, and we also put in a nice arbor.

In the foreground above on the left side of the photo, you can see a portion of a very interesting bridge-like construction across the water with three panels, perpendicular to each other, with the big panel going crosswise. It’s kind of a Japanese motif of crossing water. The owners cross the water at least a couple of times every day, when they go from their house to their garage, and when they come home.

And here’s another shot of this special private garden:

Bendele Garden Deck Photo

Garden Design Deck Photo

Landscape Design for Pulte Project on the Denver Country Club

This landscape design on the Denver Country Club golf course was the first of four Denver projects we did with Bryan Pulte, renowned interior designer. It was a major, major remodel. For starters, we completely tore out the whole existing driveway and part of the related retaining wall, and changed the elevation and grading in major ways.

Before it had been very awkward driving in, as the whole driveway was a straight shot down, creating a very, very poor sense of arrival. Instead, we created a winding, meandering flow that brought you to the arrival plaza. In this photo, you can still feel the curvature of drive behind you, and get a sense of that from looking at the photograph.

New driveway for Pulte project on Denver golf course

New driveway for Pulte project on Denver golf course

Now, instead of the old straight shot driveway that took you immediately to the left side of the house, we created a driveway that curves in such a way that it initially blocks the house from view and then reveals it, giving different glimpses of the house as you enter the property. It’s a long driveway.

We tore out a very large planting bed in front of the front door to create the arrival plaza. In doing so, we sunk the area down by at least 18″ to 2 feet, creating a level plaza. In the photo below, on the right you see both part of the original brick retaining wall and also a new dry stack retaining wall in front. We wanted to keep some of the brick retaining wall for aesthetic reasons, because it reflects the brick used on the house itself. The dry stack wall accomplishes two goals: it is visually attractive and it also covers the foundations of the old brick retaining walls, preventing a frost heaving of those foundations. In some places, we tore out the preexisting retaining walls, building huge freestanding walls to hide the neighbor’s garage doors. This was very tricky in a technical engineering sense.

This is the arrival patio for the Bryan Pulte residence on Alameda in Denver, Colorado

This is the arrival plaza for the Bryan Pulte project on the golf course in Denver, Colorado

In the arrival plaza above, what we have here initially are some concentric circles, spiraling out into vortical movement. We utilized hand-smoothed colored concrete made to look like natural stone slabs, alternating with precast concrete split-faced cobble. The cobble looks very much like natural stone, with lots of modulation and color, and it also provides a real grip for tires coming down the steep driveway. So it both looks good and it provides a very important function. As the pavement flattens out, it goes into stamped colored concrete. We were working around a lot of mature existing trees to preserve them, another big technical challenge.

Here is a view of the decks and paving for the Pulte Alameda residence

Here is a view of the decks and paving for the Pulte project

In the back, up on the left side of the photo above, you see the preexisting deck which had no connection to the ground, so we created a staircase coming down with intricate carpentry bringing people gracefully down from this deck which had been isolated. As one comes down the stairs, one walks around a water feature that is the focal point for this small garden space. The upper pool of this water feature finds its source underneath the staircase coming down. As one gets down to the ground, there is sandstone paving, and then one goes back onto what looks at first glance like a bridge in the photo, but it’s simply a lower deck where one can put a table and chairs. From that deck we look down into the lower pool of the water feature. The lower pool is a deep pool with the deck cantilevering over it. We brought in massive rocks, so it’s a very intense rock and water feature. Again, we were working around huge existing trees, and we had to work these 5-6 ton boulders carefully so as not to damage the roots of these trees. We were really pushing the limits, and had to work very carefully.

From the decks, one looks to the north for a view of the Denver Country Club golf course.

From Primitive to Peaceful: Boulder Landscape Design Featured in Boulder County Home & Garden

A garden I designed for the Mahaffy residence in Boulder, Colorado is featured in a very nice article in the current issue of Boulder County Home & Garden Magazine. This landscape design was a complete transformation of a mostly wild landscape into a serene landscape with natural themes and plenty of entertainment spaces. Here is just one photo of this residence.

Mahaffy residence, landscape design featured in Boulder County Home & Garden

Mahaffy residence, landscape design featured in Boulder County Home & Garden

What makes this article especially interesting are several “before” and “after” comparison shots, so that the reader can really get a sense of that transformation. Mahaffy himself had unique needs for his garden: A successful entrepreneur who recently sold his bio-tech company for $2.9 billion, Mahaffy now travels the world and values his garden as a refuge to come home to.

The Mahaffy landscape design features patios, a stone path leading to a koi pond, a man-made stream as well as a major natural creek, rock features involving large and small boulders carefully placed, and plenty of beautiful low-maintenance plants that thrive in Colorado.

The Home & Garden article also gives a nice expression of my some of my philosophical ideas:

“If I were to pick a theme for this garden–for any garden–it would be the idea of coming to our senses,” Altgelt says. “The garden is a place to feel your own soul in a much larger context of a soul-filled world.”

Here is the Boulder landscape design article, in PDF format.

Landscape Design in Cherry Creek, Denver, Colorado

This is a garden in Denver.

A Denver garden design.

This is Bryan Pulte’s personal residence on Polo Field Lane in Cherry Creek. Bryan is a renowned Denver interior designer, and I feel honored to have been chosen to design the landscape for his own home.

All of the usable surfaces for people in this garden are decks. It’s a series of cascading decks with wide double-tread steps. In this case we’re using a combination of a Trex synthetic wood surface and red flagstone, both with a reddish hue. It is a hexagonal pattern, with a hexagonal piece of red sandstone in the middle of the hexagonal deck section and then the border is also in sandstone, as shown below.

Hexagonal deck of Polo Field Lane landscape in Denver, Colorado

Hexagonal deck of Polo Field Lane landscape in Denver, Colorado

It’s a very small, intensely urban, very private garden, designed around and through preexisting large trees. We planted an incredible number of trees to make a veritable forest of river birch in this tiny garden, creating a glen. We also used a small, spring-like water feature with an unusual grey water-shaped moss rock. By cantilevering the paving out over the water, we’ve created sitting places right by the water. It forms a good size pool of water, where you can sit right by it.

This shows the water feature with cantilevered paving

This shows the water feature with cantilevered paving

We used ornamentally sculptural furniture, with some big pots both on the paving and in planting beds. We incorporated several kinds of Japanese Maples, including the fine cut-leaf Japanese Maple, and another type of larger growing Japanese maple which is also red-leafed. The picture above shows the triangulation of three different plants that have a reddish hue: one that is grass-like, the larger growing Japanese maple, and the cut-leaf Japanese maple, contrasted with blue spruce.

Since I have such respect for Bryan’s artistic sense and design expertise, it is especially gratifying that he has complimented my work with this quote:

Tom is a true master in his field;  he is an inspired artist.  There are many people who paint, but there are very few Rembrandts. Tom is one of them.  He and Paul (owner/contractor of Changing Landscapes) have created three extraordinary gardens for me.

Breathe in the Garden

"Breathe in the Garden" Landscape Design

"Breathe in the Garden" Landscape Design

This garden in Boulder, Colorado features a vanishing-edge pool with water for swimming adjacent to a naturalistic rock and water feature for plants and fish. There is a series of waterfalls forming a drop cascade of at least nine feet from the master bedroom down to the swimming and entertainment terrace. The terrace has an outdoor kitchen and dining room with views of the Boulder Flatirons. Looking from the dining patio, the swimming pool visually melds with the Boulder Reservoir; you cannot see where one stops and the other begins. A path decends along the water cascade to a quiet intimate viewing patio of both the garden and the grandeur of the Boulder Flatirons. A firepit is perched on the edge of the dining and entertainment patio.