Groundskeeping: A Letter from Portugal

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal

Travel Dispatches: A Letter from Portugal

It’s hard to say where I most like to be when my exploring takes me abroad. I like being where I’m familiar—definitely Paris and its arrondissements where I like to walk through the markets and bistros. In Bologna, I walk the miles of arcades looking at the architecture stopping only for a bowl of pasta or chunk of Parmigiano Reggiano. In Barcelona with its Catalonian pulse, I love the doors and wrought iron. San Sebastian I love, if just for tapas of seafood. But now: Porto, the Alentejo, Guimaraes, for the life. The people, the Posadas, the food and the wine is simply wonderful. In Portugal, like Italy, it is hard to get a bad meal and the value is extraordinary.

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal
The streets of Portugal

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal
Bright colors paint the exteriors of Portuguese buildings.

Portugal’s slight lack of sophistication comes from an ease of self and not a lack of acumen. Two of the world’s Pritzker winning architects are from Portugal, and the Portuguese sense of design is understated, colorful and to the point. The streets of the old, historic areas are mind-blowingly old. The granite and limestone buildings, sculpture and follies are worn and patinaed over the centuries with buildings showing dates from the 12th century. Simple handcrafts resonate with your soul without a hint of kitsch.

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal
Portuguese columns made of marble

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal
Traditional Portuguese Clothing

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal
Tilling in a Porto train station

Getting to Portugal is easy and inexpensive, and driving the new motorways provided by EU funds along with a GPS device makes driving incredibly easy. I’m putting Portugal on my regular itinerary, I have found things in my explorations to bring to Eye of the Day and there’s no question that I will need some time to come back and arrange.

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal
Large pots accent this landscape design.

Eye of the Day|Travel|Portugal

Let me know if you want to go!

Brent


Groundskeeping: Brent’s Eye on Austin

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center|Austin travel groundskeeping| limestone

GROUNDSKEEPING:  Austin, Texas

Being from California, born and raised, I have always had a prejudice towards Texas.  They were cowboys and we were beach people if not surfers.  They like six guns and we like bongs, they eat TexMex and we eat real Mexican food.  Girls in Texas have big hair and wear lots of makeup and who doesn’t still dream about California girls.

Texas is a desert and so is most of California. We both have major water issues and we both landscape our homes and developments like there is no bottom to the aquifers that provide much of our water.

Travelling to Austin to visit my family I have come to really, really enjoy it.  This hilly area along the Colorado River (different Colorado from the one we know in California) is a fun and exciting place and I enjoy driving the neighborhoods and suburbs when I’m there.  On a recent trip I went out to visit different landscape architects and design firms.

Several were in the Tarrytown neighborhood just west of the downtown which is doing its best to emulate the high-rise culture of many large cities today.  Tarrytown is an area of old and new residences that fit the description of “stately”.  With their use of Texas limestone for structures, walls and pathways and stairs, there is a feeling of substance and earth filled with lush landscapes that make one appreciate the humidity and heat in a way that as a Californian I didn’t know I could.

There are many, many architects and developers in the busy and growing Austin area and the design elements are trending to mid-century modern and contemporary.  The populace is very conscious of their outdoor areas and driving the neighborhoods shows a diversity of styles when it come to containers they use.

This historic estate makes the most of its entrance with lidded finials on the entry posts and two Campania concrete vase planters on the front porch.
 

Next is an empty tree planter downtown Austin on Willy Nelson Blvd.  Metal and wood, built for public traffic.  A new, modern twist on the Versailles planter used all over Europe with a very western feeling.  Perfect for walking on the sunny side of the street.  

Another commercial application, this project is in the University of Texas neighborhood – a large, metal square.  I like the scale and simplicity of its design and size in front of this office building.  

If you haven’t been and think of Texas the way I used to, I suggest a trip to the Austin area.  Great food, great music, the home of Whole Foods and a great place to experience the South and easy livin’ in great gardens.


A LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT DESIGNS FOR THE DROUGHT

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center|Sally Farnum Before and After garden design|drought

A LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT DESIGNS FOR THE DROUGHT

While landscape architect Sally Farnum of SE Farnum Associates has been taking the time to educate her clients about how to deal with their outdated, thirsty landscapes—especially rolling, green lawns—she has designed and implemented an outside environment for her own home that is water-considerate and still lush, inviting and peaceful.

The first task was to remove a large front lawn and some accompanying flower beds.

BEFORE: Water-thirsty lawn

DURING: Removing lawn and introducing granite

Next, grading, drainage and landscape plan was translated to the area. Decomposed granite was used as the base of the pathway from the driveway, culminating in a keyhole design, at the end of which a dry-stacked rock wall would serve as a retaining wall as well as the background for a Gladding McBean fountain conversion.

 

 

ALMOST FINISHED!
Flanking each side of the pathway are two Antique Green Gladding McBean Oil Jars, preparing the eye for the fountain.  Planting on the perimeter of the path area includes a variety of water-friendly plants and trees.

 

STAY TUNED
Check back next month on Sally’s design in progress for photos of the finished project.


The Landscape Professional and Client Relationship

THE DESIGN PROCESS SHOULD BE ENJOYABLE FOR EVERYONE
An interview with Stacy Fausett

Stacy Fausett is a highly respected Landscape Architect who takes great pride in what she does. She is quick to say that when she is asked to return and do further work for a client, she considers it a great compliment. We often see her at Eye of the Day, pen and paper in hand, walking the greenhouse and annex, taking lots of notes for her clients. She is looking for things that will fit into a particular design for her clients’ landscape and home. Stacy has worked to build long-lasting relationships with many of her clients, seeing them through a project, and over time moving on to new ideas in the same project later and then to other properties as they change homes. I asked Stacy a few questions about how she achieves these long-term client relationships.

EOD: How has your design relationship evolved with a client’s different projects?

SF: Obviously, having an established working relationship and familiarity allows me to skip the formalities of getting to know the client and then I can jump right into the design process. The familiarity is wonderful and makes for a fun project. It’s like working with an old friend.

EOD: How do you accommodate the client’s changing tastes over a span of time and still allow your own accumulated professional experience to show through?

SF: Each project varies with the style of architecture, the unique qualities of the property, and the client’s needs and desires. The client’s needs may have changed over time, so assessing these elements are the same as it would be for a new project. Having more years of experience behind me and knowing the likes and dislikes of the client allows me to make assessments and design suggestions. It is a very efficient way to work on a project.

EOD: What does it take to gain the client’s confidence in order for them to continue a long-term personal and professional relationship with you?

SF: It’s actually very simple to gain the trust and confidence of a client:

  1. Listen to your clients: their wants, likes, dislikes,needs and critical elements susch as time frame and budget. Respect this information.
  2. Do your homework and present quality, well thought out materials and design work.
  3. Most importantly, do what you say you are going to do in a professional and timely manner. Organization and communication are key to a successful relationship in every circumstance.

 

Eye of the Day|Stacey Fausett| client professional relationships STACY FAUSSET studied Landscape Architecture at California State Polytechnic University and has been practicing for over twenty six years. After many years of working for other Landscape Architects, she opened her own office in Santa Barbara in 2010.


Design and Los Angeles Love: Interview with Mark Rios of RCH Studios

Design and Los Angeles Love: Interview with Mark Rios of Rios Clementi Hale Studios

The easiest way to the heart of a native Angeleno is to give accolades about their beloved, but often maligned, city. Mark Rios, FASLA, FAIA, Founding Principal of the award-winning and admired design firm Rios Clementi Hale Studios in Los Angeles, is ten minutes into our interview when he says, “LA is this amazing melting pot,” before rattling off LA neighborhoods like a seasoned Metro driver. That regional knowledge would be a necessity at this point as RCH Studios has made their mark in elevating the Los Angeles landscape with high-profile designs as large as Grand Park in downtown and as small as Sunset Plaza in Silverlake, which was the prototype for a now citywide parklet program.

In much of the work in their portfolio there is a balance of the city’s cultural heritage, sustainability efforts, and an evolving and limitless design process. The firm plans to introduce the first living green wall to Sunset Boulevard. The dramatic six-story sculptural lattice of native plantings and an accompanying public plaza “will provide a breath of fresh air for further build a sense of community.”

With over 75 design awards and a fine educational pedigree, it would be easy to sit back, but Rios insists on being challenged by, and having fun with, design and the city’s rich mix of cultures. Rios and his firm don’t just praise the uniqueness of LA, but seem to be making this a long-term love story.

Eye of the Day: Your firm takes on a diverse mix of projects, from traditional houses and gardens, to campuses, public parks, and even furniture. What design philosophy do you personally bring to each project? Is it important that you finish a design with a certain goal in mind?

Mark Rios: I really believe that having a diverse body of work inspires…one project inspires another in a non-linear way. There are really great architects and really great landscape architects that focus on a particular work type, whether it’s residential, healing gardens, or tall buildings or something. And we try to do the exact opposite. And maybe it’s because we get bored quickly. (laughs) But I think the idea of learning about a problem you’re trying to solve is really fundamental to how we work. And so, I’m just passionate about the research that goes behind each project. So doing something you’ve never done before, or haven’t designed before, is really exhilarating because you have to go through all this detective work and find out about all the things that go on in making decisions about it. So a broad practice is definitely harder to achieve and it’s kind of harder from a business model. But I think for us as designers it’s more satisfying.

EOTD: I think that’s important. It must be hard to balance the business model, but to also stay true to what you want as a designer and get what you want out of that project.

MR: (laughs) It is complicated. I think that we try to establish really high aspirations for each project and that sometimes those goals or concepts evolve as you learn more about the project and more about what its needs are, what the client is about, and what the design is about. You always want to end up with a solution that solves all the issues, works really well, is on budget, and is really beautiful. But on top of that, it has to address a higher concept of nature, it has to have an idea, it has to be memorable. You want it to be provocative in some way, and so I think good work has to tell a story—it has to have a big idea behind it.

EOTD: You’re a Los Angeles-based design firm that’s changing the landscape of the city. I can play a game of chess in a pocket park in Glendale under glowing abstract chess pieces that tower over me or celebrate the Fourth of July in Grand Park—you’ve got Angelenos ditching their beloved cars to walk around downtown LA. In many of your projects there seems to be a drive to revive the city in a modern and fresh way. What about Los Angeles and its people inspire your projects? Do you think LA doesn’t get enough credit as a place for great architecture?

MR: You know, I think that LA is this amazing melting pot. And what I love about it, what I’m really inspired by, is the cultural diversity. And I think it’s the most diverse American city. And diverse in a really authentic way, not in a Disneyland way. You have all these different, really rich communities. They’re really vibrant; they have their own sort of villages within this bigger city. And there are all these facts we’ve learned, like LAUSD recognizes 95 different languages, and, you know, there’s just this amazing spread of people. So I think our work is always trying to understand all these different cultures we are operating with and what the heritages and traditions of these different people are, and how you mix them up—this mash up of culture which is Los Angeles—so that the design is contemporary and it’s about our present-day inhabitants, yet somehow it connects people unexpectedly.

EOTD: Are there any LA spots you really like?

MR: The arts district in downtown Los Angeles is pretty amazing. It’s really transforming very, very fast. People are living there, there’s great…you know…

EOTD: Bars?

MR: (laughs) Bars and great restaurants, and people are having all sorts of new creative office space. It’s a really quickly changing community, but there are all these other enclaves. I think it’s really amazing to drive through Beverly Blvd., from the Westside all the way through Beverly Hills, West Hollywood, Koreatown, and as you go through downtown Los Angeles, it turns into First Street and you go through Mariachi Plaza. And Beverly through to First street is kind of nice—it cuts culturally through all of Los Angeles. So I think those are the really great things about our city. We are in our cars a lot and so I’m always looking at the signs when I’m in my car. What language are they in? What kind of food are they serving? (laughs) You see, you go through all these precincts of different cultures. It’s fun.

EOTD: I think taking someone new to LA through Beverly is a good way to show how our city is, in a lot of ways.

MR: Yes. And it takes all the bad stuff about LA—the traffic, the car culture—and all of a sudden makes you reexamine it in a new way. Your car is your vehicle to be a cultural explorer. It’s like this little space capsule that lets you go and see all these different things. Other cities don’t have that as much.

EOTD: Because you’re based in California, drought is an issue that must come up in your design projects. To keep designs sustainable, how do you still incorporate features that one would traditionally expect in a garden or landscape, like trees, lush plants, or fountains, while in drought-conscious California?

MR: I think it’s really our responsibility as architects, landscape architects, and designers, to really push forward, to get off the grid. Sustainability really deals with all different aspects. It deals with water, power, and energy. And it’s really about trying to make everyone less dependent on and not wasting natural resources. So we’re trying to make all of our work more sustainable as far as taking less water, as far as planting areas. It’s about recycling and reusing and filtering water, as far as water drain-off, before we put it back into the ground through the storm drain system. We’re always looking at ways of generating and powering our projects and how they can be more off the grid. And there are all these living building challenges. And the AIA has a 2030 Challenge [to reduce fossil fuel usage in the building industries to attain carbon-neutral status by 2030]. And architects and landscape architects are really pushing hard to change our physical environment to make it more balanced.

EOTD: Do you have any recent projects that speak to that philosophy?

MR: One project that’s kind of fun is on Sunset Blvd. We’re doing a renovation of a big office building on the corner of Holloway and Sunset for IAC, Barry Diller’s company. And we’re putting this huge, new planted façade on the building that’s about six stories tall. It’s this big huge, moving, kind of curved awning that hangs out. It’s all planted with these plants from the Santa Monica Mountains—so all the plants are native plants. It’s sort of built like a big billboard, so it feels like one of the billboards on Sunset Blvd., but only it’s a plants billboard. I think what’s interesting about it is there is a very high water table under the building and so they are always taking water, pumping water out from underneath the building, and adding it to the water of the sewer system. So we’re basically capturing that water. All the water that we’re using to water this thing is basically from under the building. So we’re reusing the water table water to irrigate it. And it’s all sensor controlled so it only gets a drop of water when it needs it. What’s nice about it is that it’s not potable water. It is water that’s basically discharged water from under the building. So that’s a very sustainable story. People might ask, Why are you putting all these plantings on this building on Sunset during a drought? But we’re actually reusing all this water that’s getting thrown away to do it. And by doing it, it also helps with air purification and all sorts of things. I hope everybody looks at it and goes, That’s really beautiful, that’s cool and I really love it. They won’t realize it, but it has all these layers of research behind it.

EOTD: You have degrees in architecture from USC and Harvard and your designs are known for their clean and modern lines. You have formal training, but your projects go beyond traditional explorations as you’ve ventured into product and graphic design. Can you tell us more about your and RCH Studio’s multi-disciplinary approach to design?

MR: You know, I like to think of the office as this design think tank and that we are a group of designers that do research, and we evolve ideas, and those ideas get built or manufactured, and made into lots of different things. An idea can be realized through a building, can be realized through a sign, or it can be realized through a plate. But it’s the same process, analysis, research, and inspiration that goes into that. Whatever the final craft you are making is, it’s kind of the same design process. We really think of ourselves foremost as designers, and not sort of limited by a traditional discipline. We think of ourselves as interpreters of culture, just like someone who is making a movie or writing a book, trying to tell stories about our culture—and we are using a variety of methodologies to elaborate on and tell those stories.

EOTD: Are there any projects you’re currently working on that you likeparticularly that are outside of the box of what we think landscape architects typically do?

MR: We’re starting to experiment with fashion. Most landscape architects may think about it, you know, but it’s kind of a hard new thing to be learning. We’re starting with small pieces, like bags, scarves, and pocket squares, and things like that. We’re starting to think about other stuff, but I think that we’ll continue to evolve and hopefully try new things. I don’t want to know what I’ll be doing in three years! I want to see what happens—surprise myself.

EOTD: Container gardening is an easy way to control water consumption and is a popular form of gardening in drought-stricken California. In residential design, containers are often one of the last components added to a garden or home. How do you incorporate pottery, containers, or planters in your overall design?

MR: I think container gardens are fantastic for all the sustainability issues we’ve mentioned, and as far as limited means that give you great results. Containers are also really popular for another set of practical reasons. They’re like raised gardens, they’re easier to get to; they’re great for kids, the elderly. There’re a lot of practical things about container gardens. I think of container gardens as accessories. You think of your house, you have your favorite things around that animate the house, those things that bring your personality to a particular room. And people don’t think of outdoor spaces as being accessorized in any sort of way. So the first advice I’d give to everybody is don’t worry if all the containers match. (laughs) Don’t get caught up with buying containers that all look alike, you know. Just buy things you love. If you love something a lot, or this thing a lot, or that thing, then all those pieces will go together because, as artistic people, our taste comes through. I think it’s pretty impossible that if somebody loves five different things that those things aren’t going to all work together.

EOTD: So going back to school, you went to USC but also served as faculty at UCLA. One of your partners, Bob Hale, got his degree at UCLA. The schools play each other next month at the Rose Bowl. So when you go into work that day are you sporting Trojan or Bruin colors?

MR: (without pausing) I think it’s probably going to be the Trojans. (laughs) I have a long affiliation with USC and I think they have a great school of landscape architecture now and their art history department is fantastic. UCLA is terrific. I love the faculty there and they’re doing a really amazing job, but I think I’d be on the Trojans side.

EOTD: So no pranking Bob Hale? 

MR: No…we’ll be nice to each other, but you know we’ll each be rooting for our own team.

See the RCH Studio design portfolio here.