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

Prairie-Style Landscape Design in Longmont

Entry to Longmont Prairie-Style Landscape Design

Entry to Longmont Prairie-Style Landscape Design

To show the range of what I do, here is a landscape design project in Longmont, Colorado, that is much more subtle than much of my work. This open, spacious garden has a large arrival plaza that also serves as a paved play surface for kids. There’s a nice combination of precast concrete cobbles and concrete flatwork.  A row of trees give a touch of formality, both accompanying the driveway and framing the arrival parking plaza opposite the house and garage.

View of Plaza, Perennials, Wall in Background

View of Plaza, Perennials, Low Wall in Background

Another feature that is not very noticeable in the photos is the use of a lot of stone walls to echo the architecture of the house and give definition of the arrival plaza area. These walls form a circumference around the arrival plaza on the north and west sides, set back from the plaza the same distance as the house is set back from the plaza.

Longmont Garden: Dry-Stack Pillar, Wall

Longmont Garden: Dry-Stack Pillar, Wall

These walls are of dry stack sandstone, picking up the architecture of the house. Perennial beds below and on top of the walls add to the subtle yet strong spacial definition of the entry garden area. I’ve incorporated perennials that bloom in a progression, spring through fall.

Gate with Perennials

Gate with Perennials

This garden makes broad, sweeping gestures, with some big boulders of the same materials as the walls here and there in the rest of the landscape. I’ve used more low, long stone gestures of rock rather than upright, vertical ones to fit the lay of the land. The home is a prairie style home with low, sweeping roofs and an open wraparound porch. Just as the architecture picks up the prairie setting with the mountains in the background, the landscape picks up these gestures of the architecture, relating them even more to the gestures of the given surrounding landscape. Taking my cue from these forms and colors, my aim was to further harmonize the architecture with the setting, using the landscape design to accentuate and weave them together even more.

I was describing this landscape design in these terms to a friend of mine, who commented, “You know, Tom, if I were actually sitting in that garden, I believe I would just have such a peaceful, contented feeling and have no idea why. I could pick out certain plants or rocks that I would think are pretty, but I really wouldn’t have a clue about how the whole thing flows together to create this sense of harmony. Now having your explanation of how the various elements all work together, I can get a little glimpse of how you understand and appreciate the landscape, the building architecture, and the surroundings.”

NCAR Landscape Design in Boulder: Alternative 4

This landscape design alternative, labeled #4, is my personal favorite of all the concepts that I created for NCAR.

Landscape Design Alternative #4 for NCAR in Boulder, CO

Landscape Design Alternative #4 for NCAR in Boulder, CO

In this design alternative, the area in the upper right is sunken, with steps leading to flagstone paving at the bottom. You can see water cascading down the center of the steps to the bottom. This area becomes the focal point relative to the three other areas which are raised up high. These three areas form a kind of ampitheatre seating which looks down into the sunken area. Those three higher areas feature sitting steps. So this could be a venue for an award ceremony or marriage or other focal activity.

I often show this series of four alternative designs to potential clients, so they can see how wide the range of potential design can be. If we can find so many diverse concepts in a space with such tight design parameters, the possibilities really are endless.

After I presented these four concepts to NCAR, their committee requested something simpler, so I gave them a fifth landscape design alternative which, with modifications, is represented in the photograph of what was finally built.

NCAR Landscape Design in Boulder: Alternative 3

Here is landscape design alternative #3 I presented to NCAR in Boulder, CO:

Landscape Design Alternative #2 for NCAR in Boulder, CO

Landscape Design Alternative #2 for NCAR in Boulder, CO

The architectural style of this landscape design alternative is most akin to that of the building itself. The architect who was involved making minor modification to the building structure, Steve Loos, asked me to develop an alternative that reflected the architectural design gesture of NCAR as I.M. Pei had designed it in the early 60′s. This was really his launching pad to international prominence, therefore it was a very important building to him. He had taken his inspiration from the geometric forms of Anasazi cliff dwellings found in Mesa Verde. So with this alternative, I’m now trying to take these geometric patterns and apply them to the horizontal landscape, much as he had applied them to the vertical landscape.

NCAR Landscape Design in Boulder: Alternative 2

This is landscape design alternative 2 I submitted to NCAR for their rooftop plaza.

2nd Alternative Landscape Design for NCAR in Boulder, CO

2nd Alternative Landscape Design for NCAR in Boulder, CO

This alternative is the most radically different of them all. Its design is aligned with NCAR’s mission of doing research into atmospheric streaming patterns. This mission is reflected in a blue tile wave-like pattern representing water, which is similar in its dynamics to currents in the atmosphere. I gave a presentation at NCAR about water as the element of life, and the fluid dynamics of our design work with its close relationship to archetypal movement patterns in nature. Offices in NCAR’s towers look down on this rooftop plaza, so their employees could look down and see this fluid wavelike pattern–a representation of their mission. However, they chose a different, simpler design alternative.

NCAR Landscape Design in Boulder: Alternative 1

As previously posted, I created the landscape design for the NCAR rooftop plaza in Boulder, Colorado. This project is really quite interesting, because I actually gave them a total of five radically different design alternatives to choose from. Because of the unusually tight design constraints, this really shows the tremendous diversity that can be possible to design even in such a constrained setting.

In this situation, I was working with a rooftop which already had giant, deep planting beds with mature trees geometrically spaced within them. I liked the grid-like regular pattern of the trees. That was the original concept which I felt was worth keeping intact. So we have this extraordinarily geometrical patterning of the trees, but then we have four radically different approaches to the hardscape, the planting beds, definition of places to sit, changes of elevation of the paving and grass areas. This series shows there are many, many ways to find strong design alternatives and solutions, yet given the same exceedingly restrictive parameters that limit what is possible.

As I post all four of the landscape design alternatives which NCAR turned down, along with the fifth (landscape design photo here) which was built, you will see a wide range of possible concepts.

Landscape Design for NCAR in Boulder, CO: Alternative 1

Landscape Design for NCAR in Boulder, CO: Alternative 1

Here is “Alternative 1″. The circles are the trees, and the squares inside the circles are the planter boxes. This design is closest to the original layout. I varied the sizes and directions of pavement to create interest, which would have replaced the original 8×8 grid of concrete squares the size of the tree planters.