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North London modernist garden

Modernist garden: design concept, rendered
Modernist garden: design concept, rendered

A garden for a young professional couple in North London, who commute into the city every day and enjoy their outdoor space but have little time to look after it.

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Jean-Yves Gilg13 June 202010 December 20211 Comment

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The next time you have had a tooth extracted by the very professional dental team at Guy’s and St Thomas’ and you need a bit of a mood lift after the procedure, turn left into Snowfields Street and walk on until you happen across the Greenwood Theatre, Bermondsey. Built in the 1970s as a lecture theatre, the austere, concrete block was transformed into a lively, Barragan-coloured cube in 2015, and necklaced by a string of mini pocket parks by @joe_swifty. A total delight in a very urban part of London - especially as the anaesthetics begin to wear off. Resilient garden, designed to replace a tired, high-maintenance lawn and transform the area into a vibrant, sustainable space. Hundreds of shocking-pink busy-lizzies later, we lift our heads and think: ‘is it still worth it?’ In most parks and gardens, Victorian bedding has fallen out of favour. Whether it’s new aesthetics, sustainability, or the economics of it, there are many reasons why we should question bedding as a gardening practice. Historically, bedding marked a major change in garden culture, and for this reason the Royal Parks still follow that approach in a few areas, such as the Italian gardens in Regent’s Park, which were (re)designed to this effect: quick growing plants (mostly annuals) that could reliably provide impact for months, before being pulled out, exhausted, and replaced six months later. Taken in context, this becomes understandable, acceptable even, and the gaudy aesthetics start to make sense. Personally, I can’t say I like it; equally, I don’t dislike it. But whether we should continue ought to be discussed more readily, and alternatives be considered more consistently. The gently rolling woodland garden at the northeastern end of Regent’s Park this morning, a slice of the countryside in central London - with occasional reminders that the city isn’t far away. A question of scale: lovely area with stunning drought-tolerant planting around Princess Amelia’s bath house, in Gunnersbury Park, with narrower paths gently winding down the short slope, to create an intimate atmosphere away from the more public areas with their wide paths and open spaces. Great late-spring plant combination in the Crescent Border: Salvia ‘Caradonna’, Sesleria autumnalis, Geranium ‘Rozanne’, Nepeta ‘Six Hills Giant’, Amsonia salicifolia (on way out), with backdrop of Echinops ritro and Cephalaria gigantea (just starting) and side dishes of Hemerocallis, Iris (unknown) and Geranium ‘Ann Folkard’. How to design a garden in under 30 seconds: a time-lapse video to take my students through the basics of the garden design process using a small, simple urban back garden as an example. From site plan to rough design options following a grid-based approach, using a geometry that fits the concept, experimenting with shapes and patterns, and emerging with three possible options that can then be developed further and discussed with clients. Last walk up the hill before coming back to Britain. The winter walk in its late-spring clothes. Dry summers have taken their toll but on the whole plants have been holding up and most now appear settled. A few ‘before’ at the end. Chelsea highlights #4: Andy Sturgeon’s hug-giving walled garden for Mind. A balanced, intimate and comforting place where plants invite themselves freely.

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