A LOST ART : PLANTING DESIGN

Aniket Bhagwat

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When I was about 17 years old, I awoke to the real fact of what my father did for a living. Having joined the local architecture school, and with little real interest in design, I at least decided to be a responsible son, and started accompanying him on his site visits when I could. There are something’s that one remembers vividly as images whilst growing up- it’s imprinted in your mind forever. Most vivid amongst them for me, were the days when he would do planting... read more

OUTGROW

Dhara Mittal


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Naturalistic planting or nature like planting is an approach to planting design that works with designed plant communities rather than individual species. It has a broad range of approaches that fall along a gradient of two leanings - artistic and ecological. The work of several celebrated contemporary planting design professionals like Piet Oudolf, James Hitchmough, Nigel Dunnet, Roy Diblick, Thomas Rainer, Claudia West, Noel Kingsbury (to name only a few) sits across this spectrum. Though their approaches vary, what they have in common is the idea of intermingling and working with plant communities rather than an arrangement of individuals. read more

Matrix planting is an informal approach to naturalistic planting developed by Piet Oudolf. It sits in the middle of the spectrum leaning more toward the artistic side. The method is a combination of planned plant placement and randomness of seed sowing. Perennials are used to create plant combinations that are not only biodiverse and sustainable but also visually interesting and evocative. The central idea is to celebrate the beauty of plants through all seasons. We chose to work with this approach because at its heart lies the idea that people are part of and not separate from ecology and therefore for planting to be valued it has to be liked.

The study began in a barren field located in Navli, a village 80km southeast of Ahmedabad. The process was simple. The first step was to observe and identify spontaneous plant communities in and around the site. The second was to procure individual species and cultivate them under varying light conditions. The third was to grow and monitor these species over the course of 12 months. The fourth was to decode the species for plant combinations using The Matrix Style. The final step was to translate and test the species as two plant mixes

While there are numerous ways with which one can begin their journey into exploring different plant material and new ways of planting, Outgrow highlights one such way. It's methods can be used to both identify and document plants and to explore ways in which they can be combined to create planting designs. Twelve months is too short a time to correctly claim information on plant performance and behaviour (both as individuals and in mixes) and it will take several years dedicated systematic work to gain deeper understanding. Outgrow is just the first step. We hope it has interesting insights for all those passionate read less

PLANTING DESIGN

Aparna Rao

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Our perceptions and relationships with plants, gardens and nature have been in flux for a long time. The productive and performative qualities of planting have been explored by many and bring about a multitude of dimensions to the way we use them. They have been illustrated in various treatises at length across time and cultures. read more

For kings seeking happiness, who are without pleasure gardens, youth, charm, companions, knowledge of the arts, the sound of a melodious flute, wealth — all these are useless

Manasollasa which literally means ‘the delight of the mind’ was a pre-sultanate sanskrit literary text written during the early 12th century at the court of king Someswara. It covers horticulture practices, planting design and has detailed descriptions of maintenance of plants. It is prescriptive in terms of a garden layout, layering of plants and the quality of spaces one may include for pleasure, taste, sport, recreation and contemplation. It stresses on planting design which captures seasonal qualities, blooms all year round, invites birds and butterflies and has a diverse variety to captivate a user.

Of what use will be a dish of flowers to you? A flower endures but five or six days But this flower-garden is always delightful.

Saadi Shirazi, a persian poet from the 12th century uses the garden as a metaphor for life to reflect on social and moral values through his seminal work called Gulistan. Here he explains to a friend who persuades him to pluck flowers from a garden, on how quickly they would perish while a garden would last much longer and bring delight to many.

While a lot of things have changed since Saadi’s times and our values and meanings pertaining to plants and nature have been contorted beyond acceptance, the words garden and gardener still seem beloved and invoke a very special connect.

The idea of a garden however small would perhaps be unimaginable without plants, they drape a space and complete the picture by infusing it with life.

Plants are like people, exclaimed my teacher Prof.Bhagwat, when I expressed my inability to remember their botanical names citing them as complicated. He went on to elaborate that just like people, plants have two parts to a name and come from different places with different habits and display unique mannerisms. They have likes and dislikes, friends and foes, are happy and stressed and have a purpose to fulfil before they die. Understanding them is absolutely necessary to be able to use them in design. This changed the way in which I began to read them and accept them for what they were.

Working with plants has often been perceived as an extremely immersive process whether it be tending to a field, nurture little saplings in a nursery, study forests and plant communities or toil endlessly to make a garden fruit and bloom all year. Likewise, making meticulous drawings fussing over order-chaos, colour-texture and communities-compositions is equally immersive and is largely tied back to understanding the physical context, creating sensorial stimulation and feeding various constructs of the mind.

Planting design however precise is still speculative. How much we control and steer or how far we can accommodate them is something which defines our attitudes towards design. Difficult to articulate, but one can gather that planting design as a process involves a great deal of observation, appreciation, good memory or recall and patience to achieve a perfect balance – whether an order within chaos or chaos within order.

As we borrow most of our planting design sensibilities from occurrences in nature and in nature plant compositions and their arrangement is seldom seen as incomplete, one could construe that planting is complete in itself. It probably is the most versatile tool to work with; it certainly can structure a parcel of land, create spatiality, sequence spaces, choreograph various moods, exhibit a sense of time and place and has the ability to engage our mind. There are many a garden and sites across time and space milieu which represent these attributes.

The sense of vastness, enclosure, direction, illusion, identity, elegance etc can be achieved by appropriate usage of plants. In another sense, great planting design aspires to achieve an ephemeral sense of balance.

Planting design can also be regarded as an extension of art. Prof. Shaheer notes that, “A landscape is not a painting”, where he elucidates that referring to vegetation as plant palette and landscape as a canvas can be misleading. Though the origins of landscape architecture lie in art, landscapes are not static compositions fixed in time and therefore unlike a painting a designer may not have complete control over it.

A garden is a demonstration of technical skill, brilliance and a reflection of the maker. Russel Page in ‘the education of a gardener’ (1964) reflects on the process and method which is also about calculations and lists, difficulties of construction, chance vagaries of behaviour of plants, men, soil and weather.

Planting design is not only about appearances and aesthetics, but also is about pre-emptive planning, protective measures, providing shelter , providing food, reclaiming land, repairing soils, restoring balance, re-wilding, creating habitats, capturing rains, cleaning air, buffering noise, mitigating pollution and many more.

The vocabulary is beginning to expand and while new ways of finding meanings and exploring the myriad possibilities through use of plants is gaining ground, the appreciation of plants and design that involves them shall always remain to be a unique expression of self. The genius lies in working within the parameters of ecology and environment while keeping aesthetics and dynamism alive.

Plants continue to speak to us, we only have to pause and listen. read less

LIST OF LITERATURE


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Planting Design; Brian Hackett - A monumental book by Brian Hackett


Publisher: E & F N Spon;
Published in 1979.

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Planting in a Post-Wild World: Designing Plant Communities for Resilient Landscapes; Rainer, Thomas; West, C. - Designing Plant Communities For Resilient Landscapes - Two leading voices in ecological landscape design present a powerful alternative to traditional horticulture - towards naturally occurring plant communities.


Publisher: Timber Press;
Published in 2015

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Gardens of the High Line - Elevating the Nature of Modern Landscapes; Oudolf, Piet; Darke, R. - The process for the creation of a dynamic garden with planting designed by Piet Oudolf, offering insights into the planting design, plant pallets, and maintenance of the space.


Publisher: Timber Press;
Published in 2017

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Landscape Design with Plants; Clouston, Brian - A book that underscores the importance of the selection and management of native plant species in the context of Britain


Publisher: Elsevier Publisher;
Published in 1990

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The Gardener’s Labyrinth; Hill, Thomas - One of the earliest English Language books on gardening that advocates the use of the hand - with gardening tips and advice that are relevant even today.


Publisher: Henry Dethick;
Published in 1586.

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Planting Design; Brian Hackett - A monumental book by Brian Hackett


Publisher: E & F N Spon;
Published in 1979.

prabhakar-bhagwat

Planting in a Post-Wild World: Designing Plant Communities for Resilient Landscapes; Rainer, Thomas; West, C. - Designing Plant Communities For Resilient Landscapes - Two leading voices in ecological landscape design present a powerful alternative to traditional horticulture - towards naturally occurring plant communities.


Publisher: Timber Press;
Published in 2015