+ Residential

Woodlots on the Front Lawn

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+ Residential

“Wild by Design”

+ A BORROWED LANDSCAPE

Drawing upon the clients’ interest in Japanese landscapes, the ancient Japanese technique of Shakkei (or “Borrowed Landscape”) was applied to this contemporary garden terrace. Located within the tree-filled Annex of Toronto, distant views of the surrounding area were incorporated into the garden to become part of its design. The perimeter of the garden is lined with a wide variety of trees, whose structured placement frames and intensifies views of the Annex while simultaneously blending in with the landscape beyond. The diagonal stainless steel planters around the garden divide the 1200 square foot terrace into its programmatic functions such as entertaining, leisure, and cooking. They are filled with LiteTop® Growing Media, a specially blended mix of organic and mineral materials which helps the shrubs and perennials thrive and serve as a pollinator garden within the urban city.

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+ Residential

Urban Terraced Courtyard

+ GARDEN TERRACES

This residential lot was atypical, wider and shallower than normal, and presented several challenges: 1) a height differential of 3 meters between entrances 2) a foreshortened view. In addition, the client requested many programmatic elements. A series of terraced stone rectangles made use of both vertical and horizontal space to accommodate the above. The L-shaped swimming pool takes advantage of the wide lot and together with strategic planting extends the view to increase depth.

Award – Best of Canada Design – Canadian Interiors (2007)

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+ Residential

Ravine Garden

+ CANTILEVERED POOL

The topography of the ravine site was challenging. The steeply sloping site naturally stepped down at two levels into the ravine and had very little flat land.

The client requested that the garden maximize the use of space functionally. A series of walls and stairs retained the pool at the lower level which cantilevered out into the ravine. This reinforced the view into the ravine and visually extended the landscape. The slope down to the pool was transformed into a green, lush, sculptural stairway of adjacent terraces.

The upper level was graded into a flat grassy plateau allowing a safe play space for children.

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+ Residential

Urban Pool Garden

+ CARVING OUT

This contemporary pool appears to be carved from a concrete block, fed by twin water features. The slabs of the underwater stairs repeat the form of the block as a motif, fading into the texture of the water that is almost analogous to the continuous concrete. The concrete’s seamless effect was created through the use of a particular construction technique, ‘DeckOver’.

 

Award – Landscape Ontario Award of Interest, Special Interest Construction (2018)

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+ Residential

Foxley Green

+ A PRAIRIE MEADOW

This is a landscape design for a new farmhouse within the context of an existing 80 acre English landscaped horse farm. The landscape plan included new gates, roads, trellis, perennial gardens and a meadow.

 

The clients requested a low maintenance planting. In addition, due to well conditions, conservation of water was a high priority.

The concept reminiscent of the Southern Ontario Agricultural Grid, contained elements such as hedgerows, woodlots and a linear orchard. These were defined by the gravel paths, perennial gardens, terraces and a two-acre prairie meadow that surrounded the farmhouse.

 

The only maintenance requirement for the prairie meadow was that it be mowed over every fall. The first fall flowering was naturally yellow. The second year flowering was predominantly white. There was no premeditated planting scheme.

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+ Residential

Elliptical Garden

+ LOOKING THROUGH THE GARDEN GATE

The mathematical formula for an ellipse gives you the least amount of circumference for the most amount of interior area. In a garden where space is limited, this geometry becomes an efficient tool for organizing space and accommodating the client needs.

The clients were interested in preserving as much open space as possible and at that same time having a splash pool that was both a water feature and a way of cooling off in the hot summer months. The geometry was carried throughout the spatial structure of the garden including the added detail of the garden gate when the client requested a peek hole for the family’s cherished dog.

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+ Residential

Northumberl and Farm

+ ELLIPTICAL DRUMLINS

Drumlins are elliptical or ovoid hills composed of rock and glacial till occurring parallel to each other in clusters called drumlin fields. This results in a terrain of constant rolling hills. These formations, common in Southern Ontario, are products of glacial activities during the last ice age.

This farmhouse property is situated at the crest of one such rocky mound with the drumlin field extending to the horizon in every direction.  Our goal was to update the site in ways that capitalize on the inherent beauty of the panoramic vista and create areas where the client could navigate the terrain with more ease.

The first intervention is a terrace “cantilevered” over the hillside which extends the interior of the existing house into the landscape while creating a comfortable space to entertain among uninterrupted views.

The terrace walls are built from glacial boulders and reflect the historic stone masonry of the original farmhouse.

The second intervention was to resolve the angular forms of the existing swimming pool with the morphology of the contextual landscape. This was accomplished through re-grading as well as the construction of an elliptical deck. Its form rests harmoniously within the larger field of drumlins.

The remainder of the site was seeded with native wildflower meadow plants such as Asters, Chives, Yarrow, etc. that fit into the surrounding agricultural landscape, and maintain the panoramic views.

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+ Residential

Foxley Green

+ A PRAIRIE MEADOW

This is a landscape design for a new farmhouse within the context of an existing 80 acre English landscaped horse farm. The landscape plan included new gates, roads, trellis, perennial gardens and a meadow.

 

The clients requested a low maintenance planting. In addition, due to well conditions, conservation of water was a high priority.

The concept reminiscent of the Southern Ontario Agricultural Grid, contained elements such as hedgerows, woodlots and a linear orchard. These were defined by the gravel paths, perennial gardens, terraces and a two-acre prairie meadow that surrounded the farmhouse.

 

The only maintenance requirement for the prairie meadow was that it be mowed over every fall. The first fall flowering was naturally yellow. The second year flowering was predominantly white. There was no premeditated planting scheme.

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+ Residential

Urban Pool Garden

+ CARVING OUT

This contemporary pool appears to be carved from a concrete block, fed by twin water features. The slabs of the underwater stairs repeat the form of the block as a motif, fading into the texture of the water that is almost analogous to the continuous concrete. The concrete’s seamless effect was created through the use of a particular construction technique, ‘DeckOver’.

 

Award – Landscape Ontario Award of Interest, Special Interest Construction (2018)

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