keep out

Prob­lem: You have a sea­side estate, but between your back yard and the ocean is a busy pub­lic path trav­eled by all sorts of unpleas­ant unde­sir­ables. You want to keep out the riffraff, but you don’t want to spoil the view to the ocean with an unsightly fence. What do you do?

Solu­tion: Here’s some­thing I saw along the Cliff Walk in New­port last week. Basi­cally it’s a lawn that drops off dra­mat­i­cally at the edge. And hid­den inside the dropoff area is this unfriendly fence. It prob­a­bly looks gor­geous from the house, with the lawn seem­ing to stretch to the edge of the rocky shore. But it looks hos­tile as hell from the pub­lic trail.

Haha in Newport

It’s not exactly a clas­si­cal ha-ha, but close. The orig­i­nal ha-has were basi­cally retain­ing walls that were sunk in a trench, giv­ing the impres­sion that your estate extended to the hori­zon. Cred­ited to the seventeenth-century British gar­den designer Charles Brdge­man, it was used exten­sively and most famously by Capa­bil­ity Brown in his expan­sive Eng­lish coun­try­side gar­den designs.
Photo taken at Cas­tle Ashby, Northants by R Neil Marsh­man under GNU license. The ha-ha is just on the other side of the near tree.

It also is a West­ern take on bor­rowed scenery, the Japan­ese notion of shakkei, “land­scape which is cap­tured alive,” a tech­nique of gar­den plan­ning where you incor­po­rate the view into your gar­den design. So…the British gen­try, the Japan­ese nobles, the gilded Amer­i­cans, they’re pretty sim­i­lar in at least this regard: They all want you to think they have even more than they have.

February 29 2008 | Categories: landscape design | Tags: | No Comments »