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Before construction. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.)
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After construction. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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Site plan (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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The entry gate, designed by the landscape architect, consists of a mahogany frame, bronze pipe, and steel hinges, supported by the fieldstone wall. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.)
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A bluestone walkway at the entry court bridges the runnel and cuts through the Steeds holly hedge to the tea lawn. Parallel bands of lily turf, Steeds holly, and Sunset maple, layer the garden and frame a view to the birch grove in the distance. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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In a fall view of the entry court, maples and holly frame the court, and a bluestone walk crosses to the front porch. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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A fountain pool at the front porch nestles in a bed of lily turf. An arborvitae hedge
and retaining walls planted with mixed deciduous and evergreen shrubs and trees frame the entry court. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.)
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A view from the fountain pool includes the bluestone runnel, bluestone entry walk, maple row, and parking court. A hedge of Shasta viburnum at the far end of the court provides seasonal color. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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The owners of an existing residence in Greenwich, Connecticut, hired the landscape architect to redesign the entire site of their four-acre property. The vision was to create a year-round garden that would be a gracious extension of the residence and provide spaces for pleasure, recreation, and respite. The program encompassed circulation, parking, swimming pool and spa, basketball court, play lawn, golf putting green, tennis court, tennis court shed, and screening for privacy. Initially, the property consisted of an early twentieth century New England wood frame home, a pool house undergoing renovation, a swimming pool in disrepair, a canopy of mature northeast hardwoods along the periphery, and a small pond on the southeast portion of the site.
The landscape architect and owners approached the project with a modern sensibility respectful of the regional setting, materials, and craftsmanship, and the client’s interest in the work of Dan Kiley. The landscape design strongly emphasizes formal orthogonal arrangements. The landscape architect provided the design direction from initiation through construction detailing and administration, with the client being closely involved day to day.
The property is low relative to the surrounding streets, it slopes to the south, and the western boundary is a busy suburban secondary road. A system of parallel fieldstone retaining walls organizes the site into terraces from north to south, creating gentle transitions over the fourteen-foot drop in elevation along the length of the site. One enters the site through a bronze and mahogany gate, designed by the landscape architect, onto a gently curving drive. A thickly planted, mixed hedge of evergreen and deciduous shrubs, trees, and groundcover borders the wall. Nestled into the ground plane at the entry, a rectangular fountain pool quietly sends water over a small bluestone weir into an eighty-foot-long bluestone runnel. A row of red maples, a bluestone walk, and holly hedge frame the court and lead to the front door. An arborvitae hedge separates the entry court from the service parking and basketball court.
Bluestone walkways and monolithic bluestone steps define site lines and lead into the landscape. The entry walk continues from the porch out into a birch grove, where it joins a walk leading to the pool. Terraces at the south side of the house provide gathering areas, and there is a tea lawn on the east side. A birch grove shades a dry-laid bluestone walk that runs in an east west axis parallel to the length of the house. The birch grove’s veil of canopy and stems shades the house and forms a foreground for viewing the gardens beyond. The linear grove contains individual trees planted in various sizes and spacing to mimic a woodland’s random pattern of growth. The ground plane is a continuous band of lily turf with stripes of bluebells and cinnamon fern for seasonal color.
Terminating the birch grove walk on the west side is the pool terrace framed by fieldstone retaining walls supporting the slope from the road, the residence, and the pool house. Dense plantings of Norway spruce, hollies, redbud, rhododendron, and witch hazel screen the busy road. Stripes of summer-blooming perennials bordering the sunny sides of the pool terrace include lady’s mantle, iris, daylily, fountain grass, and Russian sage. The north side of this terrace, astilbe, ferns, and lily turf thrive in the birch grove’s shade. Water spills from a bluestone scupper in a stone wall on the west side of the pool terrace into a small garden basin.
A few steps lead down from the birch grove and the pool terrace to a play lawn carefully graded to preserve a magnificent elm tree. A fieldstone retaining wall supports the grade on the south end. Further steps lead down to a rectangular golf putting green defined by stone walls, and then to a tennis court and shed at a lower level. Trees and shrubs such as yellowwood, serviceberry, red maple, deciduous holly, and blueberries were planted in rows parallel to the terrace walls. Bands of perennials and grasses including indigo, iris, aster, goldenrod, and switch grass at the southern terrace beside the tennis court create a rhythm of linearity and seasonal color. The site plan and its execution create a place of beauty and discovery based on relationships of line, plane, and pattern, employing subtle detailing, fine craftsmanship, and lush planting.
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Project Resources |
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Architect:
David Kleinberg Design Associates
Site Development and Landscape Contractor:
Ceci Brothers
Fountain Consultant:
Dan Euser |
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Pool Contractor:
Wagner Pools
Pool Contractor:
Water’s Edge
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A bluestone path through the birch grove leads to the pool terrace with a fountain spout
as the terminus. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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A bluestone scupper set into the fieldstone wall spills water into a garden basin at the pool terrace. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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A bluestone path leads through the birch grove and steps down to the play lawn. The pool terrace wall, lawn steps for the pool house, and a row of yellowwood trees appear in the distance through a veil of trees. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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Russian sage and fountain grass border a fieldstone wall that runs along the east side of the pool terrace. Birch trees create dappled shade over the north side of the terrace. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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Fieldstone walls and the pool house frame the bluestone terrace and pool. The terrace is spacious for group entertainment and the spa is built into the pool. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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A low fieldstone retaining wall supports the birch grove. Two sets of monolithic bluestone steps lead to a play lawn where a magnificent hundred year old American elm tree stands near the center of the property. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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Bands of perennials and trees planted in rows repeat the layering of walls and steps in a view from the south side of the property near the tennis court. (Photos and images by Jerry Harpur, Charles Mayer, Stephen Stimson Associates.) |
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