Overgrown: Practices between Landscape Architecture and Gardening

Overgrown: Practices between Landscape Architecture and Gardening

Overgrown: Practices between Landscape Architecture and Gardening

Overgrown: Practices between Landscape Architecture and Gardening

Paperback

$39.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

A call for landscape architects to leave the office and return to the garden.

Addressing one of the most repressed subjects in landscape architecture, this book could only have been written by someone who is both an experienced gardener and a landscape architect. With Overgrown, Julian Raxworthy offers a watershed work in the tradition of Ian McHarg, Anne Whiston Spirn, Kevin Lynch, and J. B. Jackson.

As a discipline, landscape architecture has distanced itself from gardening, and landscape architects take pains to distinguish themselves from gardeners or landscapers. Landscape architects tend to imagine gardens from the office, representing plants with drawings or other simulations, whereas gardeners work in the dirt, in real time, planting, pruning, and maintaining. In Overgrown, Raxworthy calls for the integration of landscape architecture and gardening. Each has something to offer the other: Landscape architecture can design beautiful spaces, and gardening can enhance and deepen the beauty of garden environments over time. Growth, says Raxworthy, is the medium of garden development; landscape architects should leave the office and go into the garden in order to know growth in an organic, nonsimulated way.

Raxworthy proposes a new practice for working with plant material that he terms “the viridic” (after “the tectonic” in architecture), from the Latin word for green, with its associations of spring and growth. He builds his argument for the viridic through six generously illustrated case studies of gardens that range from “formal” to “informal” approaches—from a sixteenth-century French Renaissance water garden to a Scottish poet-scientist's “marginal” garden, barely differentiated from nature. Raxworthy argues that landscape architectural practice itself needs to be “gardened,” brought back into the field. He offers a “Manifesto for the Viridic” that casts designers and plants as vegetal partners in a renewed practice of landscape gardening.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262547123
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 08/01/2023
Pages: 392
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.04(d)

About the Author

Julian Raxworthy is an Australian landscape architect and horticulturalist. He is Associate Professor at the University of Canberra and Honorary Principal Fellow at the University of Queensland.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Fiona Harrisson ix
Acknowledgments xiii
1 Introduction 1
Part I
Figuring Growth
2 The Persistence of a Line 29
3 Architecture with Plants 71
4 Changing Rooms 113
Part II
Gardening Design
5 A Moving Work of Art 167
6 Marginalia 219
7 Wait and See 271
8 Conclusion: A Manifesto for the Viridic 323
Notes 335
Index 365

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Winner of the AILA ACT Landscape Architecture Award for Research, Policy and Communications from the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects, 2022

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews