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New Trends in Urban Gardening


Article # : 11306 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 5 / 1986  1,138 Words
Author : Carole Ottesen
Carole Ottesen is an author and freelance writer who specializes in gardening topics. She lives in Potomac, Maryland.

       In the city, a well-designed garden adds immeasurably to living space, to the visible natural world outside the window, and to the overall quality of life.
       
        Even the smallest garden can provide an outdoor living area during the warm months. During the colder seasons, carefully selected plantings make the garden a delightful visual extension of the home.
       
        The garden pictured here occupies a tiny city lot just 17 x 55 feet measuring from the foot of these cheerful black-eyed Susans, Rudbeckia fulgida "Goldsturm," to the house in the background. Yet it affords its owner extended living space on a terrace adjacent to the house, an attractive view of garden--not only in summer, but throughout the year--and the suggestion of a private nature preserve.
       
        A first glance of this pleasant and seemingly casual mixture of plants belies the careful apportioning of space and calculated choice of plants that went into this garden's design.
       
        The landscape architectural firm of Oehme, van Sweden & Associates, Inc., of Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, which designed this garden, used layers of plants, a change of levels, and large-scale plants to increase apparent space.
       
        Large ornamentals in small gardens such as this one set the scale of the garden. The effect is paradoxical: oversized elements in restricted areas enlarge rather than minimize. This visual phenomenon is enhanced by a logical one. If the garden cannot be seen in a single glace, it cannot be ... (1991 of 6732 Characters)
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