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Kingwood Garden Club selects Kirsch Landscaping and Design Company for …

Kingwood Garden Club selects Kirsch Landscaping and Design Company for award

Kingwood Garden Club selects Kirsch Landscaping and Design Company for award

The Kingwood Garden Club is proud to select the Kirsch Landscaping and Design Company for the Community Enhancement Award for March 2014.



Posted: Tuesday, February 25, 2014 5:17 pm

Kingwood Garden Club selects Kirsch Landscaping and Design Company for award

By Community Reports

Houston Community Newspapers

The Kingwood Garden Club is proud to select the Kirsch Landscaping and Design Company for the Community Enhancement Award for March 2014.


The Kirsch Landscaping and Design and Mulch Company is situated on a five-acre site off of Mills Branch Drive in Kingwood.

They are a group of small companies that are unique and complementary. Each has its own history, providing different types of customers with customized products and services; Kirsch Landscaping and Design, Kingwood Mulch and Backyard Golf.

The “Design Center” showcases many of the landscaping options that they provide to their customers, such as lush gardens, walkways, arbors, and outdoor kitchens. They also have a “Landscape Showcase” where numerous plants, shrubs, and trees are on display to stimulate the imagination. The nursery, only steps away, features plants and trees.

Kirsch Landscaping and Design has an array of landscaping settings which feature walkways, relaxing seating areas, water features, in addition to landscaping lighting ideas to transform a home environment.

As a passerby, their mini landscaping vignettes will whet anyone’s landscaping appetite.

For more information, visit www.kirschlandscape.com.

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Tuesday, February 25, 2014 5:17 pm.

How To Grow Green Chillies: Gardening Tips

Agriculture is what ultimately prompted civilized man to settle near rivers. It was the birth of the earliest settlements in human history. Today we have come a long way from our ancestors.

We dwell in cities surrounded by skyscrapers and traffic. But, every once in a while we go out to the country and soak up the green trees and the pleasant smells.

How To Grow Green Chillies: Gardening Tips

There are many people born with green fingers. No, they are not Martians or other aliens. They are people born with the gift of growing any plant from the earth.

Gardening has been taken up as an interesting hobby by many people. Most, of course, are interested in growing bright and pretty flowers that beautify their garden.

But, there are some other people who like to grow vegetables and other edible plants. They have a vegetable patch by the kitchen door unlike those who depend on grocery stores for their vegetables. Green chilli gardening is an all time favourite of gardening lovers. There are many tricks and tips to know about growing such a green chilli garden.

Green chilli makes a spicy addition to your recipes and is given high regard especially in India, a land famous for its spices and condiments. Below we discuss some gardening tips for growing green chillies.

Warm climate: The ideal climate for green chilli is a warm tropical climate. So, if you live elsewhere, green chilli gardening tips involve keeping the plants indoors or in a greenhouse for best results.

Sunlight: Green chilli likes it hot. So, while doing green chilli gardening, remember to plant your chilli in such a position that they are exposed to sunlight. The place must not be one where the night temperature falls below 15 degrees.

Soil type: Plant the chilli plants in fertile soil. If you are planting them in pots, make sure to use organic compost which gives the same effect as a well drained fertile soil.

Sowing: Chilli gardening tips include sowing several seeds in nearly 3 inch deep earth. Once little plants put their heads above the ground, replant them in a pot or in a different part of the garden in suitable conditions.

Watering: When growing green chillies, remember to water the plants regularly, but do not soak the roots or flood them as this will cause the plant to grow in a cold temperature and will not give the desired results.

Support: Green chilli plants can grow up to 60 cm in height. When they are laden with chilli, they tend to topple over. Chilli gardening tips involve supporting the main stem with a stout stick to prevent this.

Pesticides: When you are growing green chillies, you need not bother about using any kind of fertiliser to get rid of pests. The unique chemical composition of the green chilli wards off most pests and makes this unnecessary.

Harvesting: Once the plants are mature, it will only take a couple of weeks before green chilli is formed ready for harvesting. Here’a chilli gardening tip: you can pluck them from the plant while still green or wait till they turn red.

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare

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Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare has arrived on the Xbox One and Xbox 360, with gameplay unlike anything the series has ever seen. It’s so wildly different, I thought you folks could use a few tips.

Since Garden Warfare is an online multiplayer game, we’re giving our review an extra day to see how servers hold up. Until then, here’s some helpful advice to get you started.

Play The Original Plants Vs. Zombies

Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare is an online multiplayer shooter, which is almost the complete opposite of the original game, an offline, mostly single-player tower defense variant. While there is a little planting to be done in some of Garden Warfare’s more elaborate game modes, for the most part it’s completely unlike the series that spawned it.

So why bother playing it in preparation? For one, it’ll help you appreciate the look and feel of Garden Warfare — it’s quite impressive, seeing the static locations from the lane defense series coming to life.

Playing Plants Vs. Zombies before Garden Warfare will also give you a leg up when it comes to some of powers the plants and zombies bring to bear on the battlefield. When you do get into a mode like Garden Ops, which requires setting up plant defenses, you’ll understand what each unit is capable of.

And finally, it’s a damn good game.

Where We’re Going There Is No Single-Player

Prepare to be one of many. When Popcap and EA said they were making an online multiplayer shooter based on the Plants Vs. Zombies property, those words were carefully chosen. With the exception of a split screen co-op Horde-ish mode, all of Garden Warfare is online and multiplayer. There is no story mode tacked on, no training area to practice in. The closest you can come is starting a round of Garden Ops — plants defending against 10 waves of enemies — and set the room to invite-only.

Know Your Character Classes

Everybody has their own particular play style, especially when it comes to multiplayer shooters. If you’re new to the genre entirely, go ahead and hop from class to class until you find one that feels right. If you’re coming in with a play style in mind, however, read on to see which plants and zombies are right for you.

The Plants

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden WarfareS

The Peashooter: The cannon-fodder of the original game is a little bit front-line fighter and a whole lot of scout. The Peashooter can fire bombs, which is nice, but it can also briefly run super fast and jump super high. Coupled with the ability to root itself and become a fixed turret, the Peashooter’s primary role is to sit on roofs and be complete jerks.

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden WarfareS

The Chomper: Possibly the scariest plant to see up close, the Chomper has the ability to burrow underground, popping up under enemy zombies and devouring them in one bite. Normally a player can be bursed back to health when they die — Chompers ensure they have to respawn back in a proper, out-of-the-way location. The trade-off is that once the Chomper eats, it’s slow and vulnerable for a brief period, so choose your targets wisely.

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden WarfareS

The Sunflower: The sweet, innocent Sunflower? Not so much in Garden Warfare. While they do have the ability to heal other players and defenses, they can also take root and fire a devastating sun ray. Nice damage for what’s essentially a healer class.

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden WarfareS

The Cactus: The Engineer of the Plants faction, the Cactus shoots spikes (of course), but he also places Potato Mines, the most curse-inducing ordinance in the game. One minute you’re chasing down an enemy low on health, the next you’re exploding into the air. And in case that’s not bad enough, they can also pilot remote Garlic Drones and place Tallnut Barriers that act as impromptu cover.

The Zombies

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The Engineer: The undead side of things is much easier to understand, thanks to the clear labels. The Zombie Engineer is your classic shooter engineer. He’s got a shotgun. He builds turrets and fixes equipment. He’s got a remote control drone. He rides a jackhammer into battle and lobs sonic stun grenades. His butt crack is showing. I love him.

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden WarfareS

The Scientist: He’s not quite a healer, the Scientist. He can drop heal stations, which players on his team can use or not — he doesn’t care. He’s too busy using his warp ability to get in close so he can plant sticky grenades on his enemies. An odd duck.

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The All-Star: If you like slow-moving characters with heavy weapons, this one is for you. The All-Star carries a mini-gun, which can be downright devastating in the right hands. Get too close and he’ll drop a bomb or worse — tackle you to death. He’s got a lot of power, but not a lot of speed, which is why his ability to erect barricades comes in handy.

Tips For Playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden WarfareS

The Foot Soldier: The Zombies’ answer to the Peashooter, the Foot Soldier has a rocket jump, allowing him to get up on those roofs to end their rain of terror. Along with the blinding zombie stink cloud and the ZPG — zombie propelled grenade — this little bugger is much more than cannon fodder.

Make Garden Ops Your First Tour Of Duty

If you’ve got a split screen partner you can test your mettle out against endless waves of zombies, but for the rest of you your first taste of third-person PVZ action should be Garden Ops.

Garden Ops is a co-op mode where up to four players take on ten random waves of zombie enemies before escaping in Crazy Dave’s flying motor home (play the original PVZ!).

This is where players new to online shooters can practice communicating and cooperating in a relatively safe environment. Those two factors are the key to success in other game modes, so getting a handle on them early is key.

It’s also worth noting that each class begins with only one ability unlocked. Unless you want to charge under-powered into a full-on death match, get your plants up to speed here.

Your zombies are out of luck.

Then On To Team Vanquish

Use those skills acquired in Garden Ops in Garden Warfare‘s version of Team Deathmatch to make yourself an invaluable asset. A single Peashooter charging into battle again and again is worthless. A single Peashooter flanked by Sunflowers with a Cactus providing air support? That’s a force to be reckoned with.

Last Stop, Gardens Graveyards

By following a path through co-op and team death match, you should be perfectly prepared for Garden Warfare’s massive objective-based battles.

Gardens Graveyards is about capturing territory on the way to an ultimate goal. Maybe the Zombies want to get into Crazy Dave’s mansion and destroy it. Maybe there’s a massive Sunflower to take out. Whatever the situation, communication and teamwork mean the difference between a complete rout and a triumphant win.

Cooperation and Communication Are Key

I guess I could have just said that in the first place.

Save Up Your Coins

In order to unlock cool accessories and character variants in Garden Warfare, you’re going to need to spend a lot of coins on stickers.

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Sticker packs contain all the magic in the game. There are cool new outfits and accessories, weapon upgrades, seed packets that grant additional troops in some of the more defensive game modes, and even character variants, unlocked piece-by-piece.

Somehow EA and Popcap have managed to not include a method for spending real money on coins in the game. The only way to get them is to play, and the only way to get the best stickers is to play long and hard. It’ll be tempting to just spend your coin on the lower priced packs first. Don’t do that. It’s silly.

Relax

Yes, Plants Vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare is an online multiplayer shooter, but we’re all friends here — there’s no need to get tense or call people names. This is cartoony fun, and you sound terribly silly bitching out a fellow player over chat because they possibly kept you from earning a new color for your houseplant.

Have Fun!

Because what’s the point if you don’t?

PROFILE OF THE WEEK: Louise Clarke- Garden designer, writer and lecturer

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 February may be the shortest month, but it is a busy one. Soon after the groundhog predicts the appearance of spring, Valentine’s Day and its heart-shaped candies and long-stem roses provide a welcome break from snow and sleet. President’s Day is the time to honor George Washington and his successors, while the entire month provides an opportunity to celebrate the achievements and recognize the role of black Americans in the nation’s history. Susan B. Anthony, Steve Jobs, Abraham Lincoln, Charles Lindbergh and Babe Ruth celebrated their birthdays during the 28-day span. For millions of winter-weary gardeners, however, February is the month when they delightfully discover their annual Burpee catalog in the mailbox.

Louise Clarke is one of many who waits patiently for its arrival.

A garden writer, lecturer and self-proclaimed plant geek, Clarke has been digging in the dirt since childhood. As a degreed horticulturist at Morris Arboretum, she has developed expertise in woody plants, perennials and green roofs. 

“I learned to garden at my mother’s side,” said Clarke, of Media. “I’ve never met a monocot I didn’t like.”

A late bloomer to professional horticulture, Clarke earned an associate degree in business management from Delaware County Community College in 1976, then worked for 12 years as an assistant department manager with Macy’s. Her switch from fashion to science began in 1988 with a Bachelor’s Degree in cytotechnology from Thomas Jefferson University, followed by stints as a cytology supervisor and anatomic pathology manager at Mercy Health Laboratory, Darby, and Jeanes Hospital, Philadelphia.

“What I trained to do I liked, but it often only represented 15-20 percent of my day,” said Clarke. “Making life and death decisions was a stressful position and when I was at a microscope, I was always thinking about being in a garden.”

Clarke always kept a metaphorical hand in the soil, taking horticultural courses for her own edification at Temple University, Ambler campus. She applied to the Longwood graduate program in public horticulture, a prestigious program sponsored by Longwood Gardens and the University of Delaware which accepts only five students annually. Clarke learned those who were admitted had an internship on his or her resume and in an effort to fill the void in her experience, was accepted in 2008 as an intern at Morris Arboretum. When an opening became available nine months later, she was hired as the section leader for Bloomfield Farm, the “behind the scenes” portion of the arboretum. She also earned a B. S. in Environmental Design Horticulture from Temple.

Recognized as the official arboretum of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Morris Arboretum began as Compton, the summer home of brother and sister John and Lydia Morris. The iron-manufacturing firm founded by their father was a source of family wealth and they surrounded the home with a landscape and plant collection devoted to beauty and knowledge. The siblings traveled widely in America, Asia and Europe, returning with ideas, artwork, crafts and plants and establishing a tradition of placing sculpture in the garden that continues today.

The Morrises laid plans for a school and laboratory devoted to horticulture and botany and through their stewardship and vision, Compton became the Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania. The grounds are a historic public garden and educational institution, promoting an understanding of the relationship among plants, people and places through programs that integrate science, art and the humanities.

The 65 acres of Bloomfield Farm house the Horticulture Center, nursery beds with more than 1,200 species, composting areas and several large, old farm fields. As curator of the operational area, Clarke is responsible for many of the tasks she performs in her own garden, but on a grandiose scale, such as planning, planting and transplanting, staking, weeding, fertilizing, mulching, watering, deadheading, pruning and removing invasives. She is responsible for the rain gardens, turf areas, meadow, pest and flood plain management and gardens at the executive director’s house and historic grist mill. Continued…

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Eye of the Day Garden Design Center Kicks Off Its ’16th Annual Getting Ready …

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Even Eye of the Day’s custom water features are discounted during our sale.

Carpinteria, CA (PRWEB) February 25, 2014

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center kicks off its 16th annual Spring sale with discounts that could waken even the hibernating gardener: from now until March 16, the storefront will offer 15% to 40% off all in-stock items and up to 70% off of seconds and discontinued items.

Deeply discounted items will include Gladding McBean pottery, known for its hand-formed and hand-glazed pottery in colorful, custom finishes that each feature the Gladding McBean registered seal. Gladding McBean birdbaths, fountains, oil jar planters, traditional planters, saucers, urns, pottery feet, and ornaments and accessories may be available, depending on the time of visit. While discounts will vary by the piece, customers may qualify for up to 25% off of the coveted line.

In addition, the following will be for sale:

  •          20% off of all concrete fountains, statuary pottery
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  •     15-20% off Italian terracotta pottery
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  •     20% off Greek terracotta pottery
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  •     15% off French terracotta pottery
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  •     30% off antique Greek Pithari
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  •     30% off antique Italian pottery
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  •     25% off antique Spanish pottery

More information about the current promotion can be found on the leading garden design center’s website, and interested customers can sign up for Eye of the Day’s email newsletter to stay abreast of the latest happenings and VIP promotions, UNIQID.

Additionally, should customers be in need of Spring gardening ideas to put any recent purchases to use, Eye of the Day recommends the latest gardening trends that include composting, growing super foods such as quinoa and dandelions in planters, and growing items like grapes and berries that can then be used for home brewing wine and creating custom-blended juices.

Interested customers can visit Eye of the Day’s storefront, located at 4620 Carpinteria Avenue, open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Driving directions can be found on http://www.eyeofthedaygdc.com, or customers can call 1 (800) 566-6500 for more specific information.

About Eye of the Day Garden Design Center

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center is a retail showroom that features more than an acre of high quality garden landscape products, including frost resistant Italian terracotta pottery and fountains, Greek terracotta pottery, French Anduze pottery, and garden product manufacturers from America’s premier concrete garden pottery and decoration manufacturers. Eye of the Day is a leading importer and distributor of fine European garden pottery, and caters to private consumers, as well as landscape design and architecture firms from around the world.

To see what Eye of the Day Garden Design Center can do for your business, visit http://www.eyeofthedaygdc.com.

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Paulus Park gets new playground by May 1

Lake Zurich’s most popular park will have a new $250,000 treehouse-themed playground to replace the 17-year-old wooden “Kids’ Kingdom” by May 1.

The aging and deteriorating castle-themed equipment, built as a community project in 1996, was deemed unsafe and village officials sought ideas for new playgrounds in October.

“I put a lot more effort into this playground because it’s a community park rather than a neighborhood park,” said Dave Peterson, recreation and parks manager. “We have a lot of people who come to this park in the summer. It gets by far the most usage of any of our playgrounds.”

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  •  Long-in-the-tooth playground to be replaced

    Long-in-the-tooth playground to be replaced

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Responding to the wishes of village residents, the playground will be built with enhanced visibility and play structures for varying age groups. The equipment will also blend in with the wooded surroundings at Paulus Park.

“The park is such a nice park. The residents wanted the playground to look natural. They liked not only the colors, but also the look of the shade structures,” said Peterson. “Visibility will also be much better than what we currently have. Right now you can’t see from one side to the other.”

The 9,475-square-foot area for the playground will remain the same and the trees will be untouched.

“For the most part it will almost be the same footprint,” Peterson said. The playground will also offer some of the same features, such as swings, slides and bridges, but there are also new aspects, such as increased handicapped accessible features.

Designed by Parkreation based in Prospect Heights, the playground with Little Tykes was the top vote-getter among the 253 residents who voted on 11 options in the fall.

“When we designed the park for Paulus, we really wanted to raise the bar with inclusive playgrounds. We wanted to go above and beyond what the standards are for accessibility in playgrounds,” said Lani Chaplik, sales representative for Parkreation. “We did a lot of details on the playground to incorporate all that. We have what’s called parallel play that will allow able-bodied children and disabled children to interact at the same time, or it could even be a mother with MS in a wheelchair. It’s really getting them to feel a part of the playground.”

The playground also features designated areas for 2- to 5-year-olds, as well as for 5- to 12-year-olds. There are rock climbing walls, spiral slides and spinning play equipment.

“There’s a lot of unique features to it,” Chaplik said.

Trustees agreed to hire Plainfield-based Hacienda Landscaping to remove the old playground and erect the new equipment, which should take about two weeks. During the process, the playground area will be fenced off, said Maria Guzman, owner of Hacienda Landscaping.

“We make sure everything is safe,” Guzman said. “We have to follow the specifications. We have to follow those instructions. And when we finish installing, we call out the manufacturer. They have to come to the job site to make sure everything is according to specifications.”

triblocaltips@tribune.com | Twitter: @TribLocal

Can Hayden Tract Be More Than an Architectural Curiosity?

Ask architects about Hayden Tract and they can tell you all about it. Owing to its abundance of eclectic buildings designed by Moss, it has long been regarded as a mecca for architectural pilgrimages, that one special place in the city—possibly the country—where architectural adventurousness can seemingly run free. Today, Moss is still engaged in creating singular buildings for the Samitaur Smiths, like the recently-completed Samitaur Tower and the Waffle, an undulating, egg-crate structured conference center currently under construction. Hayden occupies a central position in the history of contemporary architecture, specifically that rough industrial brand that emerges from the creative synergies of Los Angeles.

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[Another Eric Owen Moss design. Photo via Flickr/Scott Moore.]

But ask non-architects if they know what and where Hayden Tract is and you are bound to get puzzled looks. This one special place is so special, it turns out, that many people don’t know about it. Perhaps this is because for most of its life it has been more a scattered collection of secretive buildings than a cohesive neighborhood. It is the quintessential industrial park, not designed to flirt with the surrounding public realm and perhaps by nature resistant to it. No Water Garden is this. Nor is it anything like nearby Blackwelder, a collection of renovated industrial sheds turned into creative office space that, well, still look like industrial sheds.

But it may soon become easier for the greater public to come to the gates of Hayden, thanks to the extension of the Expo Line to Santa Monica. As Los Angeles Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne put it, Hayden “promises to set the stage for a fascinating clash of philosophies: the private, market-driven approach of the Samitaur Smiths coming face-to-face with L.A.’s newly expanding public realm.” Can Hayden Tract come to hold greater meaning for the city?

haydenmap.jpg
[The first point is Conjunctive Points. The rest are new projects being built in the neighborhood.]

Architects are already beginning to bridge the gap between Hayden’s architectural curiosity and public use. In addition to the Expo Line extension, the area is getting new mixed-use developments like the Runyon Group’s Platform, which Abramson Teiger Architects has designed for a site right at the edge of the Hayden zone.

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[The Platform project.]

“We looked at a lot of places on the Westside,” says Alex Lin, cofounder and principal of the architecture firm Hopscape, which opened its offices in Hayden last year. “We wanted to be in a place that has a good creative vibe and a very casual environment.” In essence, Hayden Tract is a series of nodes where people work. Metro even calls it “job rich” on its website. What it is not, however, is rich in amenities. “It needs a public realm—restaurants, retail shops, public spaces, green spaces, as well as some basic infrastructure—to really come alive,” says Lin. “When we do large mixed-use developments we look at them like small cities, as communities. The things in-between, all the public things, are vital.” Hopscape cofounder Ken Ho adds. ” It’s not a nice place to be when you work late … and as architects we tend to do this a lot!”

Bryson Reaume, president of City Constructors, Inc., a construction firm with expertise in adaptive reuse, knows a lot about converting industrial spaces and re-energizing former industrial areas. He’s been witnessing it firsthand in Downtown’s Arts District, where their offices are located. In Hayden, they worked with RAC Design Build to convert a former aircraft facility into creative offices for the media company Framestore. “It took years for restaurants and shops to start appearing in the Arts District, but now there is a dog park and even a large community park going in,” Reaume says. “It’s starting to feel like a neighborhood. It’s just waiting to happen in Hayden Tract.”

PLATFORM%20VIEW%208.jpg
[Another view of the Platform project.]

That the collective force of the Moss-Samitaur Smith partnership has the lockdown on the design of the area is more urban myth than reality, perhaps the result of the sheer number of buildings they have done together over the years—31 buildings built or planned at a total of one million square feet. But the Samitaur Smiths don’t own all the buildings and they certainly don’t own what lies between them. “There is room for anybody to come in and do something,” says Moss. “A park, a skate park, anything.”

In fact, other architects have been inserting their visions and building upon Moss’s armature in different ways and at different scales. Often, out of necessity, they are responding to Moss’s vision of architecture, and they must figure out how to explore their own designs in such a symbolically-charged environment. “It was important to us that we recognized Eric Owen Moss, but it was also important that we make a building that is relevant for our clients,” says Sherry Hoffman, cofounder and partner of (M)Arch., a Santa Monica firm that recently completed the build-out of one of the iconic Moss buildings.

blur1.jpg
[The Blur Studio office space.]

For (M)Arch., working within the Moss-Samitaur Smith paradigm inspired creative approaches. Their project, a 20,000-square-foot creative office space for Blur Studio in the Paramount Laundry building, is a playful commentary on the original design. “Having a project here means starting with a building that already has a strong position, both aesthetically and culturally. You feel a responsibility to preserve the building’s original relevance” while also creating a new set of meanings, says Todd Erlandson, cofounder and partner of (M)Arch. “We started by contrasting the comfortable and casual culture of Blur with Moss’s post-modern industrial language—expressing the Blur vibe in contrast to an intentional, highly-wrought shell. The next step was about creating immersive moments, those individual and holistic experiences that are uniquely related to the client’s culture.”

framestore.jpg
[Framestore.]

Projects like Framestore are designed in elements to make up for the lack of them on the outside. Its islands-within-commons plan, with faceted and angled partitions, makes it behave more like a landscape. It also features a three-story tower with an observation deck to provide more outdoor space, all within the building’s footprint. And the Cunningham Group’s new office space is laid out like a town square with a central park, with sunken landscaping cut into the polished concrete floor, surrounded by work spaces.

blur2.jpg
[Another look at the Blur space.]

(M)Arch’s Blur is another case in point. Says Erlandson, “Blur is fortunate because it is located in an edge condition, adjacent to downtown Culver City. Additionally, we are working with them to create a shared outdoor space between them and a like-minded neighbor. Even though parking is a premium, there are opportunities for small amenities to happen in these in-between spaces.”

So if the public infrastructure doesn’t yet exist on the outside, that hasn’t stopped tenants and their architects from building them on the inside. At some point, more work like this could begin to fill in the gaps. As Hayden gradually opens to the public, it could be not just a lab for architecture, but also for urban design and city making.
· Hayden Tract [Curbed LA]
· Curbed Features [Curbed LA]

Top 4 reasons to hire a landscaper

OurWindsor.Ca

Curb appeal is defined as the rate of attractiveness your home exhibits to viewers from the street. Not only vital for selling your house, but also very important to most homeowners in Windsor – regardless of whether their house is on the market or not. At the end of the day, nobody wants to have that house on street.

While some have the natural ability to work the land, build stuff, plant things and to imagine how to place things beautifully; not all of us have this Do It Yourself (DIY) talent. This is where hiring a professional landscaper comes into play. Not only will you save time and effort – you will save money in the long run. First and foremost, you want to go with a local landscaper in Windsor. This will reduce travel and response time in project planning and management. Other reasons for going with a professional landscaper includes:

1.    Ideas: A professional landscaper in and around Windsor will have a ton of ideas when it comes to landscape design. Not only because of their training, but also experience. While anyone can come up with an amazing landscaping concept, the ability to be abundant with ideas and to spin one idea into a new and improved design by using past and industry expertise is a unique talent of landscapers.

2.    Planning versus doing: Just because someone has a great landscaping idea, doesn’t mean it is always feasible. Landscapers have the training to view a site, take their client’s ideas into account and really asses if something can be laid out properly.

3.    Material: A landscaper will have access to construction materials that you might not have ever imagined of. As they deal with other suppliers, they can really help bring your project to life and perhaps bring it to the next level with supplies you may have not even thought about.

4.    Avoid problems: Your front yard is not the first project a professional landscaper has worked on. Experience can go a long way to avoid any major disasters that can fall down the road. This will save you time, money and frustration.

Looking to add some curb appeal to you home? With over 100 professional landscapers located in Windsor, finding the right one to suit your needs will be a snap! For more information, visit Windsor’s Landscapers directory.

Private sanctuaries and other ideas at the Yard, Garden & Patio Show

Landscape designers at the Portland’s Yard, Garden Patio Show are digging deep to deliver solutions to challenges – think problematic site conditions such as slopes – and display inventive use of screens and plantings to create an oasis and, perhaps, a visual escape from neighbors.

Experts will also be showing how garden rooms can make small spaces look large and remind us that the simple act of hanging out among nature can help reduce stress.

What will your sanctuary look like?

Wander the Oregon Convention Center through Sunday to see seven showcase gardens as well as garden vignettes by members of the Association of Northwest Landscape Designers.

There will also be an urban edible garden and Lora Price of Design With Nature in Portland will offer permaculture techniques for sustainable edible gardening.

You can also listen to the free presentations by gardening experts on urban farming and medicinal gardening to perfect plant combinations and fragrant flowers.

Linda Meyer of L Meyer Design was asked, as were the other experts, to use the show’s display space to show a solution to a challenge commonly encountered in residential properties. She chose to focus on dealing with problem slopes and small urban lots in hillside housing developments.

“There are wonderful things you can do to create a landscape with multiple levels and spaces for entertainment, comfort, livability,” says Meyer, who has been designing in the Portland area for eight years. “I find small landscapes very satisfying. Size appropriate plantings, multiple hardscape surfaces and a comfortable flow for the area are essential in creating a useable yard.”

In some cases, steep slopes need additional engineering, but a landscape designer or landscape contractor can assist in determining this, she says.

Elida Rivera, a landscape designer at All Oregon Landscaping
, a design build firm in Sherwood that specializes in custom residential landscapes, has noticed that busy families continue to be interested in outdoor rooms that serve many hobbies and interests.

Her tips:

  • A small space can live large when designed well using such elements as elevation, plant material and hardscape structure.
  • With creativity and the right use of materials,  an outdoor living space can be created on a budget. 

“We are passionate about family, home and bringing outdoor living outside for our clients,” says Rivera. ”Time and time again our client’s have expressed how our projects have brought their families closer together.”

— Homes Gardens of the Northwest staff

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