Garden Designer’s Roundtable: Transitions

stone-stairs.jpgTransitions broadly refer to change.  A change in status, as in child to teenager.  as in working person to retiree.  As in winter into spring.  The moment in the garden which is neither winter nor spring, neither summer nor fall, neither fall nor winter-these are transitory periods.  Change of any kind implies challenge and uncertainty.  As a designer, I am routinely asked to address the change from one level to another.  If you have ever climbed a steep set of stairs, you know how much effort is involved to make the transition from one level to another.

stone-stairs.jpgA beginning college course in calculus is just that-a beginning.  Advancing from one level of proficiency to the next is greatly helped by a friendly transition process.  The effort it takes to move to the next level-considerable.  Steps in the landscape were invented to make that transitory experience as easy and as interesting as possible.  When I am in New York, and zooming up an elevator, I wish for a transition from the first floor to the 28th floor with some grace and style.

bluestone-stairs.jpgSometimes long flights of steps from one level to another  are unavoidable.  I try to make that trip as visually interesting as possible.  This makes the transition from one level to another an experience-not a chore.

transition.jpgThe transition from the public landscape to the private and personal landscape can be brief and substantial-as in a wall.  A hedge.  A gate.

slope.jpgA subtle transition in grade can be dealt with in a number of ways.  Short flights of steps endow a long and gently ramped soil, with a little lively punctuation.

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The walk to the front porch is traveled by good friends, family, and UPS.  The front porch-a formal transitional space that gives friends, family, and delivery people a moment to collect themselves.  A little time to compose themselves.  A little time to shed the cares of the day, and focus on the moment.  I like big wide and ample  porches.

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Any transition from one level to another asks for an inventive solution.  An invitation to move from one place to another-both physically and emotionally. The time it takes to make a change from one place to another-transitions in the landscape need to be big and generous.  Transit implies a movement from one space to another.  That transit space needs as much patience as any other space in the landscape.

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A steep slope  is not so friendly to people.  Some slopes can be addressed with steps.  Some slopes can be addressed with soil graded into tiers, and grassed. Any transition in the landscape needs to be addressed thoughtfully.   Imagine yourself at that transitional moment.  Design with that moment in mind.

I am keen to read what other members of the roundtable have to say about transitions-please join in!

Jocelyn Chilvers : The Art Garden : Denver, CO

Scott Hokunson : Blue Heron Landscapes : Granby, CT

Mary Gallagher Gray : Black Walnut Dispatch : Washington, D.C.

Debbie Roberts : A Garden of Possibilities : Stamford, CT

David Cristiani : The Desert Edge : Albuquerque, NM

Jenny Peterson : J Petersen Garden Design : Austin, TX

 

 

Comments

  1. Your posts are simply beautiful and beautifully written.
    Lots of soul and inspiration. My garden is taking a different shape as a consequence.
    Thank you! And keep up the great writing.

  2. Lovely photos and and examples of how to tackle the situation that almost every landscape includes. Imagining yourself there, and in the moment is brilliant advise!

  3. I can’t wait to read your first book. (Hint, hint)

    Kind regards from quickly-turning-green DC.

  4. Not sure why I missed the importance of steps / level changes in transitioning, but you nailed it! Landings sized to pause – yes! (even though here everything is flat) And more than anything, such “problem” areas that don’t connect or match up can become the most special part of a landscape – I’m continuing to embrace them in my work.

  5. Deborah, I enjoyed your take on Transitions. Steps are such a crucial part of gardens and you’ve shown some inspiring photos. The broad expanse of steps with the containers clustered on them is so soothing and inviting.

  6. Deborah, your remark about how transitions should be “an experience” really struck a chord with me. That is the same word used by a designer I used to work for, whom I really respected. She was uncompromising. “A garden should be an experience” she said. Your post drives home the point that this means every part of the garden.

    • Deborah Silver says

      I have to agree with her about that-at the very least I think there’ satisfaction in working towards that in a garden.

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