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

Prescott Garden Design in Boulder, Colorado

Pam Prescott's garden design.

Pam Prescott's garden design

I was gratified to receive this email recently from Pam Prescott, a landscape design client in Boulder, Colorado:

…. I can’t tell you how often I am stopped on the street by people telling me that our landscaping is drop-dead gorgeous. I always give them your name and say that you deserve all of the credit. You clearly have much bigger, more spectacular projects, but the fact that you used your creativity and artistry to make our small project a thing of beauty speaks to the spirit with which you design.

Thank you again, for making our property beautiful.

What is particularly interesting is that this was the first of about five or six residential projects done with a team of people, including a developer, an architect, a builder, and landscape contractor. It is an example of the wonderful new homes that can be created when a great team of professionals works in harmony with one another. I think that Pam would make a similar statement about any member of this team. It’s a real tribute to great teamwork.

Prescott garden design: dry stream bed with bridge

Prescott garden design: dry stream bed with bridge

Essential to this garden are the wonderful perennials, in juxtaposition with beautifully scaled rock formations. A man-made dry stream bed provides grading and drainage, and becomes the focal point of the garden.

Equally important, the walkway from the sidewalk to the front door features a combination of natural sandstone slabs and precast concrete pavers which have been tumbled for an antique look. We utilized several drought tolerant groundcovers, including an extraordinary native called “pussytoes” between the stepping stones. Part of the walkway is a bridge crossing the dry stream bed.

Following the stream bed further into the property, we see it suddenly becomes part of a group of beautifully wild naturalistic rock formations, set into a plethora of flowering perennials and ornamental grasses. This landscape design project involved a great deal of shaping of the earth, with berming for privacy. As the dry stream bed runs into edges along the berm, it carves away at the base of the berm, exposing a ledge outcropping, as would happen in nature. A beautiful flowering, fruiting multi-stemmed tree on top of the berm provides additional privacy, blocking out both houses across the street, as well as the traffic.

Prescott patio

Prescott patio

Prescott garden design, side view

Prescott garden design: side view

It is the front yard that is the primary garden space. It’s an entry garden. We put most of our strong intention and creativity into beautifying the experience of approaching the front door, as well as looking out from the dining room. Often enough, people put so much of their effort into a more private rear garden, and here this is a garden that greets visitors, establishes the ambiance of the property and the house, as we had hoped that this entry garden would do. Even with the privacy features, it is still quite open to the street, so it adds to the whole neighborhood. It’s no surprise that a lot of people stop to talk and to compliment Pam on her garden.

Steamboat Springs landscape recognized by Luxe

A mountain landscape I designed in Steamboat Springs, Colorado is featured in a 16-page article in Luxe Magazine. Luxe’s niche is the very high end “luxury” residential architecture and design. This article, “Natural Order”, shows the landscape design, the home architecture, the artwork and the furniture all combining synergistically to create the special ambiance of the home.

In the article, the homeowner comments, “The landscape that Tom created is extraordinary, and it continues to age like a fine wine.” This is, of course, my goal with every landscape and garden I design: to create a living landscape that becomes more beautiful as it grows and matures.

Here is the PDF file of the entire 16-page Luxe article (with best resolution), and this jpeg will give you a 2-page taste of it.

Vail Valley, Colorado Landscape Design in Mountain Living

Back in February, one of my landscape designs was featured in Mountain Living magazine in their article, “Anatomy of a Green Dream Home”. This home, located in Cordillera in the Vail Valley of Colorado, exemplifies some of the ways I like to work in harmony with nature. I felt that nature was my co-creating partner as I designed a landscape that provides a series of experiences as you walk through from one space to the next, featuring rock, fire, water and plants.

To view the article, which includes some nice photography of the landscape, here is Part 1 and Part 2 in jpeg format. Part 2 is especially focused on the landscape design, and some of the thought that went into creating it. Alternately, here is the whole Mountain Living article in pdf format, with best resolution.

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.