For courses in Landscape Design.
This text was written for students who are beginning their design careers, as well as those currently practicing residential design. This text provides students with the quality fundamentals of residential site design - exploring functional and artistic elements, with a focus on appreciation of quality and updated standards for site development, maintenance techniques and training. It clearly illustrates and discusses the actual procedures and underlying principles utilized by experienced residential site designers.
Features and Benefits
NEW - Reorganized and revised chapters. Offers students a much more sound basis for thinking about environmental aspects of landscape design.
NEW - Architecturally responsive design material emphasized throughout - Examines landscape designs and structures that blend with the existing house character. Allows students to deal with the architectural character or style of a house throughout the design process much more easily.
NEW - Re-written chapter on Meeting the Clients. Orients important material to the student (rather than professional) and presents it in a slightly different light.
NEW - Restructured and simplified material on functional diagrams. Eliminates references to heights of spaces and streamlines and reorganizes the remaining coverage.
NEW - Replaced abstract images with more realistic sketches - In Ch. 10 on Form Composition. Illustrates examples of using principles in design forms and patterns.
NEW - Added chapter on Special Project Sites. Gives students guidelines and examples for dealing with 1)the corner site, 2)the wooded site, 3)the sloped site, and 4)the townhouse or condominium site, preparing them with on-the-job problem-solving skills.
A practical approach. Serves students with a design manual for those interested in gaining knowledge and developing skills in the design of landscapes for private residences.
Nearly 500 illustrations - In the form of plans, sections, elevations, diagrams and perspectives. Shows students the application of material presented.
A realistic step-by-step process for developing functionally logical and esthetically pleasing design solutions. Teaches students to be sensitive to clients desires and wishes, their house, and their property.
A focus on the process of design. Demonstrates this process by following, explaining, and illustrating how it is used in one real-world project at critical points in most of the chapters of the book
Guidelines for working with a client - Material is presented from a designers approach to residential design; program development; and project presentation at various stages. Outlines the items that need to be discussed with and presented to a client and provides students with this important business perspective on landscape design.
An underlying outdoor room approach to residential site design. Discusses what outdoor rooms are, how they can be created, how they can be designed into a site, and how to select and compose materials to furnish them.
Unique coverage of alternative design. Promotes the development of this study at various levels in site design.
Useful chapters on Functional Diagrams and Form Composition - Critical subjects in creating functionally and visually successful design solutions. Explains how to develop esthetically pleasing design compositions using various forms, and gives special attention to the design patterns of the floors, walls, and ceilings of outdoor spaces.
A major case study - Connects all design phases together. Illustrates how new material is applied to previously learned material and gives students a real-world context to the material they are studying.
The planning and design of a residential site is an exciting and challenging endeavor for the design professional. It is exciting because the designer works closely with the clients on a personal basis, deals with the design in a detailed and artistic manner, and typically has the opportunity to see a design that has been created on paper become a three-dimensional reality in a rather short period of time. Residential site design is challenging because it directly affects the quality of life of the people who live with the design each day. Well-executed residential site design can positively influence the quality of life by eliminating functional conflicts on the site, providing proper recreational and leisure amenities, and creating an environment that is visually and functionally pleasurable.
Yet, despite the potential significance of residential site design, it is an endeavor that is commonly done inadequately, inappropriately, and, in some cases, incorrectly. A drive or a walk along a typical suburban street reveals a host of problems and offenses to the eye. Highly manicured foundation planting, overgrown plant material, inadequately sized driveways, poorly conceived approach walks and entrances, and shapeless lawn areas are just a few common problems. The areas in the back of homes are no less guilty of poor layout and visual chaos.
There are numerous interrelated reasons for these typical problems with residential sites. The list includes a lack of homeowner appreciation for good design, traditional acceptance of outdated standards concerning site development for a residence, inappropriate maintenance techniques, and financial limitations. Also on the list is a lack of understanding and training in the fundamentals of design by some of those who plan and implement residential sites.
Many individuals who are currently designing and installing residential sites are doing so as a result of on-the-job training with little or no formal design education. Furthermore, those trained as landscape architects are more often involved with larger, more complex design projects or are generally perceived as unaffordable by the average homeowner.
Consequently, the purpose of this book is to furnish the reader with the quality fundamentals of residential site design. It is written by designers/ educators and presents basic principles, concepts, and procedures for preparing site plans and associated documents for residential sites. This book is primarily intended for readers who are beginning their design careers as well as for those currently practicing residential design who wish to enhance their skills and knowledge.
Chapter 1 discusses the attributes and inadequacies of typical residential site design practices. Chapter 2 presents the overall design premise that this book is based upon, that of the "outdoor room." Chapter 3 presents and illustrates techniques for designing a residential site in an environmentally responsible manner. Chapter 4 outlines a design process used by a designer to conceive, formulate, prepare, and present design solutions for a residential site. The considerations and procedures for initially accepting a project and working with clients are discussed in Chapter 5. Chapter 6 describes the tasks of site measurement and documentation, as well as the preparation of base drawings. Chapter 7 explains the development of a site analysis and design program, while Chapter 8 illustrates the process and development of functional diagrams, which provide organizational structure fort proposed designs. In Chapter 9 the thoughts and processes of preliminary design are explained along with a description of basic design principles used in this phase. Chapter 10 provides the reader with the principles of form composition for establishing a design theme, while Chapter 11 presents ideas for spatial composition. Chapter 12 discusses the process and considerations involved in preparing the master plan. Chapter 13, a new chapter, provides guidelines for designing for specialty sites: the corner site, the wooded site, the sloped site and the townhouse garden.
While other books also address the subject of residential site design, including some of the topics previously outlined, this book is unique in that it clearly illustrates and discusses the actual procedures and underlying principles used by experienced residential site designers. The chapters on functional diagrams and form composition should be especially helpful to the reader. These subjects are most critical in creating functionally and visually successful design solutions; yet they are typically the subjects given little or no attention. The development of alternative design studies, at various levels in the design, is also a unique feature of the book. In addition, information has been included to assist designers to become more sensitive to the environment. These subjects, as well as others in the book, are presented in a "how-to" manner so the reader can easily apply the concepts.
This book also approaches residential site design with the underlying thought that the site associated with a home should be conceived as a series of outdoor rooms. These outdoor rooms are the basic structure of a good design and possess functions similar to those inside. In many instances, outdoor rooms serve as both literal and figurative extensions of indoor living. This book discusses what outdoor rooms are, how they can be created, how they can be designed into a site, and how to select and compose materials to furnish them.
Residential site design is not treated in this book as cosmetic decoration applied to a site only to enhance the appearance of the house. While both house and site should be considered together, good site design is more than "horticultural makeup," strategically placed around the exterior of a home to provide a pretty setting. Similarly, this book does not consider residential site design to be "landscaping" or the simple arranging of plant materials around a house. Indeed, plant materials fulfill numerous prominent roles in design, but they are not the only, nor necessarily the most important, elements used by designers to create exterior space. This book is primarily a design book and so the reader does not find a plant list nor other specific information on the growth and characteristics of plant materials.
Some of the thoughts and principles in this book represent commonly accepted design knowledge and are used as a matter of standard practice by experienced designers. Other ideas have evolved from the classroom where we have spent over 40 combined years teaching college students, nurserymen, and landscape contractors. We have discovered a number of concepts and teaching techniques that are felt to be essential in teaching and learning residential site design. Finally, there are a number of thoughts in this book that have resulted from our own practices in the area of residential site design. We are both registered landscape architects and have designed over 100 residential sites, a variety of them winning local, state, and national design awards.
Norman K. Booth
James E. Hiss