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This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Household Quotes, Civilizations around the world have been creating gardens for thousands of years. Since then, garden designs have continued to evolve, influenced by trends and changing priorities.

To show how much garden designs have changed over the years, Household Quotes.co.uk identified 10 key eras in the evolution of garden design and visualized them as a series of detailed 3D renders.

c. 1400s BCE: Domestic Garden (Ancient Egyptian Era)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Our Ancient Egyptian garden is inspired by the world’s oldest known garden plan. The design exists today as a 19th-century copy of a painting from a nobleman’s walls in the era of Pharaoh Amenhotep II. However, the plan is so sophisticated that it is likely a style that had developed over years or centuries before this example was designed.

The Egyptian garden was an oasis. It provided shade and carefully ordered natural beauty in an arid land. But the garden was also a spiritual haven, dotted with symbolic patterns and trees, including frankincense and sycamore fig.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The bold geometry of the Egyptian garden had as much to do with practicality as aesthetics. In addition to pleasure, gardens were cultivated for the raw ingredients of everyday life – from herbs and spices to papyrus and palm trees that offered both shade and fruit. Water features were positioned to aid irrigation (worth thinking about if you don’t want to trek to the far end of your garden every night of a hot summer).

400 BCE to 550 CE: Graeco-Roman Courtyard (Classical Era)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The walled cities of Ancient Greece and Rome left little space for gardens. Only the rich had room for a small courtyard in the centre of their home. The roofed portico around the edge of the garden below is called a peristyle and offers shelter among finely painted walls. The Ionic columns that form the colonnade are inspired by those in Pompeii’s House of the Coloured Capitals.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

 

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Greek and Roman architects designed these urban gardens for escapism as well as to entertain. They would specify dining areas and impress with the inclusion of sophisticated statues and fountains. High walls offered privacy and regulated the climate for all-year use.

It wasn’t all stone and water. Herb and flower beds boasted roses, violets, saffron, thyme, marigolds, and narcissi, offering fresh scents and colour – although these areas, too, would be augmented with statues and water features. Box hedging zoned larger courtyards, while Cyprus and mulberry trees put greenery on the vertical plane.

c500s BCE to c1700s CE: Chahar Bagh/Pleasure Garden (Indo-Persian Era)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

“The chahar bagh was more than a pleasure garden,” said Aga Khan IV in a 2003 speech. “In the discipline and order of its landscaped geometry, its octagonal or rectangular pools, its selection of favourite plants and trees, it was an attempt to create transcendent perfection – a glimpse of paradise on earth.”

According to the Qur’an, paradise will be a place of flowing, incorruptible waters, flowers, and fruit trees. On Earth, the Chahar Bagh garden celebrated natural beauty while acknowledging the imperfections of life as lived. Still, designers would often divide the garden’s four quadrants with running water to represent the four rivers of paradise.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

A sloping underground tunnel called a Qanat was used to irrigate gardens in arid regions. Rugs embroidered with flora enhanced areas where nothing would grow. In verdant areas, roses were prominent, supported by bulb flowers, violets, poppies, and flowering shrubs. The pavilion on the central axis emphasises the symmetry and craft of the garden. The influence of Persian garden design is still felt today, through Islamic traditions and then via Greece, thanks to the impressions made on Alexander the Great as he invaded and conquered the region.

1000 to 1450: Town or City Garden (Medieval Era)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

As the medieval city developed, there was still space for town dwellers to cultivate a garden. Ongoing food insecurity made home ‘kitchen gardens’ commonplace. Meanwhile, physicians prescribed the scent of flowers to ward off the plague and recommended garden walks for mental health. Therefore, ornamental gardens flourished in hospitals and wealthy homes, while commentators snorted that smaller garden owners should stick to vegetables.

Another key difference between regular city gardens and those of the wealthy was the enclosure. While poorer gardens were often street-side, wealthier gardens were securely enclosed – following the lead of the monastery and castle gardens from which they took their cue. Further inspired by the renaissance in Italy, European gardens were designed with greater regularity of form, adopting rows and symmetrical quadrants.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

 

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The garden as a status symbol flourished, and so did one-upmanship among horticulturalists seeking finer and rarer flowers for their ornamental gardens. Roses, lilies, and violets became commonplace. When the tulip arrived in Europe, speculation on the value of bulbs led to ‘tulip mania’ and – perhaps – the “first great financial bubble.” One Dutch gardener even designed a network of carefully positioned mirrors to give the impression of a larger collection (and thus, greater wealth).

Early 1600s: Knot Garden (Tudor Era)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Tudor designers wove medieval and Renaissance-Italy influences into impressively complex gardens. The knot garden had begun in medieval times as a practical way to partition kitchen gardens with intertwining patterns of herbs. Under Henry VIII and, later, Elizabeth I, the knotted hedge became an ornamental feature to be admired in its own right.

The knotted hedges of ornamental gardens often dipped at the ‘joins’ to give the impression that they actually threaded through. This may be hard work to achieve but, once established, such hedges are relatively low-maintenance. Gardeners can fill the hollows between knots with fancy herbs and flowers: gillyflowers, carnations, violets, marigolds, and roses were popular in Tudor times.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Tudor gardens could be grand attractions. A knot garden might have been just one feature of a network of walled garden types, including labyrinths and fish ponds. A knot garden works best when visitors can get an overhead view. Elizabethan designers favoured a snail mount, consisting of a sloping path that spiralled up to a pavilion or sitting place.

1600s: Jardin à la Française/French Formal Garden

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The Gardens of Versaille are one of the few ‘international celebrities’ in the gardening world. And they exemplify the French formal garden type, whose enormous influence across 17th-century Europe continues to reverberate today. Versaille and its contemporaries were cutting-edge horticultural achievements requiring an enormous effort of labour. Versaille itself continues to need replanting once every century.

But all of this does not put the style out of reach of the average 21st-century gardener. Versailles is an expansion of the garden unit known as the parterre: a formal garden divided into patterns by gravel, hedging, and flower beds. Those with the time and imagination can scale the style down and replace elements with less maintenance-intensive features. As well as richly scented plants including lavender and rosemary, the French formal garden may feature trees such as beech, chestnut, and Linden.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The English variation on the Jardin à la Française, like the knot garden above, was inspired by the patterns of embroidery. This parterre à l’anglaise transplanted the patterns of the French formal garden to a grass lawn, softening the effect and delivering a spectrum of floral colour. Water features and statues are popular in all variations.

Early 1800s: Gardenesque Style (Late Georgian)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

 

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Celebrated garden designer John Claudius Loudon conceived the gardenesque style as high art, which, all the same, removed design responsibility from architects and passed it to gardeners. Loudon proclaimed that “any creation, to be recognised as a work of art, must be such as can never be mistaken for a work of nature” – and yet his gardening philosophy called for plants to be allowed to express their natural uniqueness.

The trees of a gardenesque landscape should be segregated by type, but the arrangement should not be geometric or repetitious. And the flora should be displayed for pleasure and education, without being “picturesque” (or kitsch, as we might put it today). All in all, the gardenesque style is wracked with contradictions.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Loudon’s solution to these contradictions? Firstly, to import exotic blooms which fully celebrate nature while being quite unnatural (and therefore artistic) in an English garden. And second, to plan the gardenesque design on a ‘hidden’ structure of irregular geometric shapes of grouped species. The result was an immersive, dramatic garden. Unfortunately, gardenesque principles are difficult to replicate since they involve swapping out even local grasses for exotic ones and making lakes and large rocks seem artificial by substituting the surrounding vegetation wholesal

1800s: Early American Period – Pioneer Kitchen Garden

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Aesthetics were the last thing on the mind of pioneer kitchen gardeners. As invaders of a strange land, the kitchen garden was a vital source of sustenance. The garden was laid out with an eye for efficiency: close to the door for access and security, with perimeter paths for harvesting rather than admiring the beds. Border hedges or fencing kept scavengers out.

But there was beauty in this economy of design. Sweet-smelling herbs were planted nearer the house, with onions and cabbages grown at a distance. Patterns emerged where seasonal vegetables grew close to each other to prevent the disturbance of perennials that could be left alone. Taking a tip from the Native American tradition, settlers would plant corn, pole beans, and squash together. These three crops provided trellis support, nitrogen for healthy growth, and light and temperature regulation, respectively.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Fruit trees, cotton, and medicinal plants were also cultivated, but flowers were not a priority. The settlers learned lessons that prevail today: listen to the land and find beauty and structure in the functioning of nature.

1870s to 1920s: Arts & Crafts Garden (Victorian & Modernist Eras)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The Arts and Crafts movement valued authenticity and a hands-on approach. Its manifestation in the garden was no different. Like the gardenesque style before it, the arts and crafts garden railed against kitsch ornamentation – but now, faithfulness to the site was paramount. From region to region, this meant the use of indigenous plants and materials. From home to next-door home, it meant celebrating nuances between the architectural and environmental features of neighbouring properties.

The arts and crafts garden should express the personality of its owners. It begins as an extension of the home and then blends into the landscape beyond the owner’s plot, segueing into woodland or the countryside. The natural textures and colours of materials used in built elements of the garden should be exposed, and the crafter’s hand might be visible in the uneven stones of drywall or crooked trellis.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

The look can be approximated and modernised today with fashionable materials such as rattan and slate and the use of vines and fruit trees. But to truly approach a ‘modern’ arts and crafts garden, begin by stripping back your garden’s features and looking into the local ecology and history for artistic inspiration.

1900s to Today: American Suburban Front Lawn (Contemporary Era)

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

It’s a modern classic: the American lawn, veteran of Fitzgerald’s novels and David Lynch’s movies. The lawn is the simplest of gardens but a complex status symbol representing colonisation or middle-class attainment, depending on your perspective.

At first, grass was a matter of survival: settlers sent for non-indigenous grass seeds to replenish the land after their livestock ate their way through what they found. But after the American Revolution, as food security improved, settlers embraced European influences. The lawn was conceived as a country estate in miniature – an enclosed and manicured landscape with room to roam.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Image credits: HouseholdQuotes

Lawn maintenance aside, the art of the American front garden is found in its practical elements: a winding path that delivers varying views of the home and surrounding landscape, that white picket border fence and shady tree. Choosing a dogwood, magnolia, or sugar maple tree adds narrative to the front of your home, changing with the seasons.

Today, the sprinkler system and the hired gardener of the American front lawn operate along the same lines as the ornamental hermits mentioned in the introduction – they are garden furniture in themselves, indicating the unruly scale of the land and the wealth of the owner. But with thousands of years of garden design inspiration from which to draw, you are sure to invent more unique ways to bring out the best in your home.

This Is How Garden Design Evolved Over 4,000 Years All Over The World, Provided By Household Quotes

Wednesday, 09 August 2023 by feeta_admin
Household Quotes, Civilizations around the world have been creating gardens for thousands of years. Since then, garden designs have continued to evolve, influenced by trends and changing priorities. To show how much garden designs have changed over the years, Household Quotes.co.uk identified 10 key eras in the evolution of garden design and visualized them as
  • Published in ancient times, Architecture, around the world, Design, digital art, domestic, entrance, evolution, full-page, garden, garden history, historical gardens, History, home design, Homepage trending, household quotes, modern times, over the years, Palace, recreated, Renders, timelapse
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51 Modern Landscape Ideas: Live Outdoors

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These 51 fabulous landscape design ideas will make you want to live your life outside, during work, rest, play and every meal time in between. Don’t be intimidated by the size of some of these great gardens, even when scaled down, these combinations produce a great effect that will surely delight and impress. We’ll walk through graded garden spaces with layered green panoramas, paved exteriors with green interludes, clean box hedges, elegant garden water features and tree-lined landscapes that look ripped out of a storybook. Whether you’re creating an outdoor recreation space for guests or a secret hiding place in the world, here’s an inspiration for everyone.

Way to heaven. Build abundant boundaries around a wide path that leads the eye to a green panorama of perfectly aligned mature trees and neat shrubs.

Be artistic with your yard. Courtyards do not have to be a series of uniform pavements. Using a combination of paving options, you can create something much more unique and interesting.

Evergreen textures. These well-shaped plant beds are packed with contrasting textured evergreen perennials to create a palpable border around the yard. A combination of grass and crawling ground cover has a surprisingly effective effect.

Square. Simple squares create a very formal landscape layout that can be achieved with low boxing hedges. Place more delicate plants in the center of your square plant beds, or make a focus with an attractive pool and fountain.

This square landscape design preserves topiary boxes of solid hedge to achieve even a single-level appearance.

Superior symmetry. This luxurious garden landscape achieves its sophisticated appearance with a perfectly symmetrical arrangement of mirrored garden steps and tree rows.

Peaceful conversation pit. Dipped low into the courtyard, this outdoor conversation cave almost goes unnoticed if not for its fabulous modern waterfall feature.

The structured courtyard. Small linear plant beds and tonal patio plates interrupt this large patio to create an attractive pattern among small trees. In autumn, the focus shifts from the purple flowerbeds to the treetops, which glow brightly orange.

Sculptural beauty. Topiary provides a green, sculptural beauty in a garden, but you can also incorporate man-made creations as an outdoor focus. This wall-mounted sculpture is combined with atmospheric exterior lighting for effect even after dark.

This dynamic garden statue inspires a landscape full of movement. Water fountains bubble from the paved terrace and a vertical garden wall creates a visual cascade.

Walk on the wild side. Unleash your landscaping layout with winding paths that relax around wild plant arrangements and majestic trees.

Start a riot of color. Jakaranda trees are a subtropical tree native to South America that bursts with lively, long-lasting violet flowers. As the petals fall like confetti, a purple carpet forms below.

Equally beautiful but with delicate white star-shaped spring flowers, a Juneberry tree is a hardy choice that grows well in most positions, including wet landscapes and under light shade.

In this courtyard design, the Juneberry tree creates an amazing canopy over an outdoor dining room.

Eat outside in a jungle of greens. This modern outdoor dining table is located in a location that is completely surrounded by climbing plants and tropical shrubs to create a 360º jungle view.

Sweeping beds of color. Make a garden path into a curved journey of joy through edges of colorful bushes in contrasting sizes and textures. This loose approach makes a great contrast against a sharp linear architecture.

Fill in the gaps. A landfill of perennials of Mind-your-own-business will quickly fill the gaps between stepping stones to achieve a well-established look. Add seedlings of various heights to bring greens to terraces.

On the straight and narrow. A narrow path along the perimeter of the household provides an easy tour of the garden. Plant beds and water feature are fixed perpendicular to the path to form bell lines.

Create a zen moment with a minimalist deck, serene focus and a comfortable modern outdoor chair.

Multi-storey planting. Insert roofs and overhanging balconies to bring more greenery into your garden or patio. A multi-level plant scheme fosters a soothing feeling of complete solitude and security.

Pond perfection. This precise circular pond with fountains, built-in plant bed and surrounding path is a comprehensive design that can be effectively scaled to fit smaller environments.

Simplify your design with built-in benches. In a minimalist modern landscape design, a laconic material palette is key. To maintain simplicity, give up independent seats in favor of custom cast concrete alternatives.

Make an abstract compilation. Abundant green lawn, paved courtyard area and pond filled with monolithic shapes come together in an abstract, angular formation. The elements are both defined and held together by a pure concrete boundary.

Create a water world. Each section of this unique garden is presented as a floating platform due to fully flooded boundaries. Line paths provide passage over and around the ponds.

Form a garden that torments in the wind with soft Mountain sedge, and Great Bluegrass of the Great Plains and prairie regions of central and eastern North America.

Monday lawns with sharp edges. A healthy green lawn is a beauty to be seen, but becomes more of a jewel with a clear paved edge.

Geometric climbs. Table and modern outdoor chairs are positioned randomly at the base of a spectacular geometric garden in this unique landscape design. A water channel draws the eye to the focal point of the climb.

Build exterior rooms. Custom drawer benches build walls of utility and separation.

Color-changing cube. Dig up courtyard walls in copper that will change from brown to blue and green as they age.

Evoke traditional Japanese serenity with decorative stones, a pebble bed and a stone water basin.

Slices of nature. Whether you’re planning a pond or tall plant beds, these chambered volumes are split from one central mass to make a cool combination.

Make a gardening game with a cactus jackal.

Customize your landscape overflowing with life and color with a hardy Creeping Jenny perennial. Its leaf color depends on sun exposure, appearing chartreuse in shade and golden in full sun.

Clean cut and quiet. Domesticate nature within smooth, polished perimeters. Add exterior overlays to emphasize plant textures.

Full and floral. An abundance of mixed soil cover and perennials around rough stones form a floral ancestral quality.

Trembling terraces. Combine outdoor stairs with staggered terraces to climb a layered cake of lush greenery.

Another stepped landscape design, but this time with crenellated planters.

A raft of greenery. Set within a pond, this planting platform makes a floating landscape.

Look to the future with futuristic pod-like planters and pixelated sculpture.

Conquer difficult plot forms. This tight, triangular shaped garden presents landscape layout challenges. In response to the puzzle, one wall of the building was integrated into the pool as a water feature. Bamboo border draws attention to the abundance of height instead of the lack of square images.

Simple squares of paving stones clearly accommodate an outdoor kitchen and a courtyard dining room.

Just part of the landscape. This comfortable fire lounge looks as if it has been there forever thanks to the introduction of crawling ivy around the outdoor fireplace.

Build a pool planter with a dual function. Not only home for plants but also a water feature, this rustic stone wall planter makes a decorative backdrop for a small pool.

Concrete and eminent, this unique pool design and industrial background adds monolithic majesty to the green landscape.

Pruned trees. Trees are always amazing in their wildest and most natural form, but another approach is to cultivate sculpted canopies with topiary boxing bases.

The beauty of empty space. Developed in Japan in the late Kamakura period, karesansui gardens are built on the rector of yohaku-no-bi, which signifies the beauty of empty space. In this example, hollow edges of raked sand draw attention to enchanting mound ground cover and fiery red bushes.

Dip into a deck to create warm memories around a fire pit.

Form a corridor of color with boldly contrasting grasses.

This comfortable fireplace design lies down on a sandy base to evoke beach holiday vibes.

Speaking of holidays, palm trees and hammocks have five-star tropical vibes written through them.

Sculpt fabulous boundaries. Margarinata American Aloe and the broad-leaved Red Poker Aloe build an attractive definition around a raised terrace. Organ Pipe Cactus creates height.

 

Need guidance on plant names and combinations? Look at The Dream Home Gear of Home Design, where we dedicate an entire book to excellent plant combinations with plant names and zones.

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51 Modern Landscape Ideas: Live Outdoors

Thursday, 14 July 2022 by feeta_admin
Like Architecture and Interior Design? Follow us … Just one more step. Please click the confirmation link sent to you. These 51 fabulous landscape design ideas will make you want to live your life outside, during work, rest, play and every meal time in between. Don’t be intimidated by the size of some of these
  • Published in courtyard, Designs by Style, garden, outdoor furniture, outdoors, USA, viral, Zillow

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