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A Garden with Architectural Style

There are three different terms that have been used to describe the architectural style of gardening: Italian, formal, and architectural. Basically, these three are the same word, and for the sake of this article we will use the word architectural. This word is used to refer to the broadest sense of architectural landscape including all exterior parts of the building to where the work may extend.

Architectural gardening includes features like trellises, arches, columns, obelisks, statues, and other similar objects. Some of the first garden schemes were created by architects who never claimed to be gardeners at all. These examples provide some of the best!

The “formal” style is rather descriptive. This world is useful and is often very useful. This method is also referred to as the Italian style, having been performed best in Italy. The architectural style is in total contrast to everything natural. The methodology is opposite, and the effects are opposite. However, either will add an artistic and fulfilling look to your garden setting. Each style, whether architectural or natural, offers valuable designs, making both open to consideration. Both have advantages over the other in specific circumstances. You can choose from different styles to create a setting that is best suited for you based upon the environment where you live.

English and American artists used to avoid geometric methods. By strongly avoiding these methods, it actually led to their own downfall in trying to create a purely naturalistic setting. By using the discredited method, the gardeners could have created a pleasing and satisfactory result. During the last 50 years, the formal or architectural style of gardening has made a lot of advancement in America. It is now studied and therefore better understood, so it is better appreciated and practiced. Recent formal gardens are much more suited to their environment.

This is especially true for small plots. Small plots are very hard to achieve a natural look, so using a formal setting, will actually create a beautiful and more simple style. The formal style, and the simplicity of it, for smaller plots, actually makes it a popular trend. It is important to understand the broader relations and conditions of the architectural style, before learning the key point that are required for architectural style. The architectural garden becomes an extension of the building! Adding a water feature that has clean straight lines can add to the architectural style your are looking to create in your landscape

Houses usually have porches or promenades, places with open air, or others with cover to enjoy shade during the hot season, or shelter from the rain. A public building often features colonnades, pergolas, loggias and approaches. These features extend away from the actual walls of the building and into the area of the garden.

It is best to keep close connections between the entrance steps, the walks, the resting seats or benches, the fountains, and any statuary, to see how completely the main edifice may extend quite to the boundary of the grounds.