destroying smuggler’s gulch

Smugglers Gulch and Tijuana River Valley

I’m stand­ing in the United States as I take this pic­ture. The hills you see are less than a mile to the south but are mostly in Mex­ico, across the bor­der. The low break in the hills car­ries the name Smuggler’s Gulch.

The mouth of said gulch has been part of one of the more con­tro­ver­sial ter­raform­ing projects in progress as we speak, the demon­stra­tion of enhanced fenc­ing tech­niques that is the US-Mexico bor­der fence. Ironic/pathetic isn’t it, that not that many weeks ago the news was buzzing with the twen­ti­eth anniver­sary of the fall of the Berlin wall, but here in many of our back yards new walls are going up? I’ll leave dis­cus­sion of the ethics and human costs of the fence-building mind­set to orga­ni­za­tions like Amnesty Inter­na­tional or even the Catholic Church, but the project’s costs to stuff like nature are pretty steep as well.

Left: This photo by April Reese from a Jan­u­ary Land Let­ter shows much bet­ter than my photo just some of the earth mov­ing that went into block­ing off this canyon. [ Source ]

When peo­ple hear that the Depart­ment of Home­land Secu­rity is build­ing a fence they might say, oh that’s nice, what harm can a lit­tle 15 foot tall fence do? Well, place your nice lit­tle 15 foot fence on top of 35,000 truck­loads of fill dirt essen­tially form­ing an earthen dam designed to con­tain humans instead of water. Humans have more cog­ni­tive abil­ity than water mol­e­cules, so what might con­tain water will just send the humans to the next avail­able cross­ing point.

The rich coastal chap­ar­ral that was here has been bull­dozed and buried. Hay wat­tles with some hydroseeded low-growing plants will be expect to take care of ero­sion con­trol. Down-slope, the sen­si­tive habi­tat of the Tijuana River National Estu­ar­ine Research Reserve waits to see what’s going to hap­pen once the rains begin.

December 04 2009 | Categories: landscapeplaces | Tags: | 10 Comments »

just about to be published

catalog-cover1

Linda brought by my desk the 2009 Spring cat­a­log of the Prince­ton Archi­tec­tural Press. She really like the photo on the cover, a plant­ing by Andrea Cochran, a San Francisco-based land­scape archi­tect and the sub­ject of a new book, Andrea Chochran: Land­scapes, which is just about to be pub­lished. (The project shown is the Ivy Street Roof Ter­race Hayes Val­ley Roof Gar­den in San Francisco.)

You may recall that Linda is a quil­ter, and the cover design really looks quilt-like in the way it’s put together: blocks of dif­fer­ent plant­i­ngs (not just blocks of sin­gle kinds of plants), all assem­bled together so that one group­ing of plants con­trasts dra­mat­i­cally against another, like one pat­terned fab­ric in a quilt that’s been set against another. In fact the author of of the book describes Cochan’s work as “stud­ies in rep­e­ti­tion and order, orches­tra­tions of move­ment in the land­scape, and ele­ments placed in geo­met­ric conversation”–which almost sounds like the prin­ci­ples oper­at­ing behind many quilts.


Check out Andrea Cochran’s web­site for other exam­ples of her strong, lin­ear land­scape designs.

Thumb­ing through the cat­a­log I ran across another title that made me stop for a closer look, Bam­boo Fences, by Isao Yoshikawa and Osamu Suzuki. The cat­a­log says that the book “pro­vides a detailed look at the com­plex art of bam­boo fence design in Japan, pre­sent­ing these unique struc­tures in over 250 pho­tographs and line draw­ings. From the widely used ‘four-eyed fence’ (yotsume-gaki) and the fine ‘rain­coat fence’ (mino-gaki) to the expen­sive ‘spice­bush fence’ (kuromoji-gaki), these exquis­ite designs impress with their sim­ple beauty, pro­vid­ing plenty of inspi­ra­tion for your own bam­boo fence.

bamboofence1

Author Isao Yoshikawa gives a brief overview of the his­tory of bam­boo fence build­ing in Japan and clas­si­fies the dif­fer­ent designs by type. A glos­sary pro­vides expla­na­tion of Japan­ese fence names and struc­tural terms.”

Of course, fences like this prob­a­bly wouldn’t work so well if your house is in the Tudor or Span­ish taste. Unless of course you want your home to develop a “home store Gothic” look that one writer called the look that sub­ur­ban houses accrue over time as their own­ers buy what­ever strikes their fancy at the local Home Depot, his­tor­i­cal accu­racy and style be damned.

bamboofence2

But imag­ine these around a clean-lined mod­ern house. In fact, Richard Neu­tra was known to like his glass-walled homes to look out on a Japanese-styled land­scape. And some of the more geo­met­ric ver­sions might even look amaz­ing behind a land­scape designed the the sub­ject of the first book.…

bamboofence3

Above: Images from the book, pho­tographed by Osamu Suzuki.

January 28 2009 | Categories: gardeninglandscape design | Tags: | 5 Comments »

back fence/black fence

I don’t know about you, but cer­tain kinds of basic house­hold main­te­nance can seem about as unin­ter­est­ing as watch­ing beige paint dry. To keep me moti­vated, I some­times offer myself lit­tle rewards. Why not make the repairs I need to make, but at the same time why not mod­ify the orig­i­nal plan a lit­tle bit to keep things interesting?

The old fence

The old fence

There was a back fence that we installed almost twenty years ago. At the time we were a lit­tle lazy, and the thought of some plain exte­rior ply­wood nailed to some sup­ports sounded like an accept­able solu­tion for an out of sight, out of mind piece of the yard. Some of the fence hadn’t fared well over the years, how­ever, and for some of the recent week­ends we’ve worked on repairs.

Panels being replaced

Pan­els being replaced

So we knocked out the worst of the pan­els and replaced them with new pressure-treated ply­wood. And instead of plain, unfin­ished pan­els, I thought it was time to make it look like some­thing other than a fence that might have thrown together by a cou­ple of twenty-somethings with a still-developing sense of how the world should look.

I con­sider the house and yard as a bit of a liv­ing lab­o­ra­tory. Why not paint the pan­els a color that no one in their right mind would paint them? Say, some­thing like…black. And why not dress up the plain pan­els with some bands of steel that will rust to a color that’ll match some of the steel details that are start­ing to appear around the yard?

Black fence 1

Black fence 1

In these pho­tos the steel has only begun to rust. By mid­win­ter it should be nicely browned all over.

Foliage contrasts nicely with the black fence color

Foliage con­trasts nicely with the black fence color

I think the greens and browns of the plants show up nicely against the new back­ground instead of retreat­ing into it. And even if it’s not exactly the color you would have painted it, the fence at least doesn’t look like it’s about to fall down…

October 11 2008 | Categories: gardeninglandscape designmy gardenrambles | Tags: | 2 Comments »

inspired by nature: patterns (coda)

After read­ing yesterday’s post on nat­ural motifs in archi­tec­ture, Linda shared this photo that she’d taken recently on her recent trip to Europe. One of her stops was Barcelona’s famous Parc Güell, designed by Antoni Gaudí, where she found this haunt­ing detail of palm fronds dec­o­rat­ing a fence.

Palm fronds in bronze fence

Palm fronds in bronze fence

Ever since I saw a lyri­cal doc­u­men­tary on Gaudí in the 1980s (I’m pretty sure it was Hiroshi Teshigahara’s Anto­nio Gaudí) vis­it­ing the park has been on my list of things to do…someday.

Archi­tec­ture and the botan­i­cal world of course have a spe­cial rela­tion­ship. Early shel­ters were con­structed of branches, twigs, thatch, fronds, logs, and other plant prod­ucts that would pro­vide shel­ter from the ele­ments. It some­how seems fit­ting that mem­o­ries of those early days of human civ­i­liza­tion live on in how we dec­o­rate our built envi­ron­ment, long after many of our build­ing mate­ri­als now come about through indus­trial processes and not through nat­ural ones: Even as we seek shel­ter from the nat­ural world, we con­tinue to need to cel­e­brate it.

Yes, humans seem to find ever darker things to do to each other and the rest of the planet. But quiet cel­e­bra­tions like this of what’s truly impor­tant con­tinue to give me guarded hope for the species.

September 23 2008 | Categories: artgardeninglandscapelandscape designplaces | Tags: | 1 Comment »

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 »