LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
PLANNING 1 SY 2023- 2024
PLANNING 1 SY 2023- 2024
PLANNING 1 SY 2023- 2024
PLANNING 1 SY 2023- 2024
INTRODUCTION
LANDSCAPE PLANTING
ART SCIENCE
PLANTING DESIGN HORTICULTURE
Horticulture. The science or art of cultivating fruits,
vegetables, flowers, or ornamental plants.
INTRODUCTION
PLANTING DESIGN HORTICULTURE
ART SCIENCE
DESIGN PROCESS
“Planning Before Planting”
PURPOSE
LANDSCAPE STYLE OPTIONS
FORMAL – Geometric and Symmetrical
INFORMAL – natural- appearing
Geometric- Geometric- Natural -
Natural
Structural Natural Structural
HISTORICAL PRECEDENT
1. Ancient Egyptian Gardens (2600–31 BC)
2. Ancient Greek Gardens (480–146 BC)
3. Ancient Roman Gardens (27 BC–476 AD)
4. Ancient Chinese Gardens (1600 BC–1279 AD)
5. Japanese Gardens (575–1600 AD)
6. Medieval European Gardens (500–1200 AD)
7. Moorish Gardens
8. Gardens in Renaissance Italy
9. The Formal French Garden
10. The English Landscape Garden (1715–1820)
11. The English Victorian Garden (1820–1880)
12. The Edwardian Garden (1880–1914)
13. The American Garden (1840–1920)
14. Modern Landscape Architecture in America (1940–1970)
15. The Environmental Movement (1970–Present)
PLANNING 1 SY 2023- 2024
PLANTING DESIGN PROCESS
1. Draw a Base Map
2. Analysing the Environment
3. Exploring Design Ideas
4. Creating a Design Vocabulary
5. Composing the Planting Design
6. Developing a Plant Palette
7. Planting the Garden
8. Maintaining the Garden
Step 1: DRAW A BASE MAP
PLANTING
DESIGN PROCESS property lot lines
building outlines
fenestrations
topographical features
walls, fences, lampposts,
driveways, walks, or other
paved areas
existing plants to remain
Step 2: ANALYZING THE ENVIRONMENT
PLANTING
DESIGN PROCESS CLIMATE
Temperature
Moisture Conditions
Light
Wind
SOIL
Moisture and Aeration
Physical Structure
Chemical Structure
Step 3: EXPLORING DESIGN IDEAS
PLANTING
DESIGN PROCESS 1. Establishing a Design Concept
2. Determining the Design Program
3. Creating the Design
DESIGN ENTAILS ANALYSIS
Axial Conditions
Circulation
Geometry
Grid
Hierarchy
Points of Transition
Public versus Private Space
The Borrowed View
Figure and Ground
DESIGN ENTAILS ANALYSIS
Axial Conditions AXIS. An imaginary line about which a form,
area, or plane is organized.
Circulation CIRCULATION. Represents design elements of
both movement and rest, setting the pace, mood,
atmosphere, and experience of a landscape.
Geometry
Grid GRID. A system of coordinates used in locating the
principal elements of a plan while creating an
understandable pattern.
Hierarchy HIERARCHY. Refers to the physical form of rank
ordering of spaces or features, communicating
value and importance while adding organization.
DESIGN ENTAILS ANALYSIS
Structuring Elements STRUCTURING ELEMENTS are physical forms
that define space, create units, articulate circulation,
suggest movement, or develop composition
Public vs. Private Spaces
The Borrowed View BORROWED VIEW describes scenery or
In Chinese gardens it is described as jie jing, elements beyond the actual design that become an
in Japanese landscapes shakkei, and
in Italian design as integrazione scenica. important or integral part of the composition.
Figure and Ground A FIGURE AND GROUND diagram enables the
designer to reveal the form of the ground plane by
darkening the figures or 3-D elements of the design.
Points of Transition POINTS OF TRANSITION are loci of change,
thresholds of movement from inside to outside,
darkness to light, enclosed space to open space,
grade to grade, movement to rest, or places to
change direction.