It s important to have a vision for your garden before you start any design work. You ll want to be thinking of all the items above.

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It s important to have a vision for your garden before you start any design work. You ll want to be thinking of all the items above. 50

How do spaces interact, what do you plan to use them for? We re looking to hit the sweet spot with your design, making it both beautiful and functional. 51

Make sure to establish goals for your landscape before you start your conceptual design. For example, if you want to establish a garden with room for entertaining, you ll create objectives that help you reach your goal. 52

Don t forget to steal I mean borrow ideas! 53

At this point, you should have completed your site map and your site analysis. Now we ll work our way to a final plan. 54

The first step is creating bubble diagrams. You ll want to draw multiple versions to fully suss out your vision. 55

You ll be literally drawing out blobs or bubbles on your tracing paper and marking them with general uses. Loosely define these uses, e.g. xeric bed, sitting area, plant screen from neighbors, etc. Also mark pathways. Use your site map circulation/use pattern information to determine where potential pathways could go and how they could connect. 56

Not so fast, you re not ready to create your plan yet. 57

All of these principles should cross your mind as you re creating your design. 58

Wow, that s a lot of design principles to consider. Some of these, like color and emphasis, you re probably already thinking about. Make a conscious effort to go through the rest of the principles. 59

We use edges to define a space. Edges can be hard like this concrete curbing, or soft, like a row of plants. An edge can be a physical object that can also create a visual barrier, or line. Edges create lines, even if they aren t straight. 60

Patterns can be series of plants that repeat or series of any other feature that repeat: hardscapes, pavers, mulches, etc. 61

Proportion is the size of an object in relation to other objects in the garden. Scale, on the other hand, is the relationship of an object to a fixed object, usually the human body. Getting the ideal proportion and scale can be the most challenging concept to pull off correctly in the garden. Garden elements such as benches, tables and arbors are most functional when they fit the human body. Consider proportion when selecting plant material. In the ideal situation, the plants are relative to people, existing plants and the house. A small café table next to a 60 foot oak tree is not a recipe for a cozy corner. 62

Symmetry is where elements of the design are equally divided. Both sides could share all or part of the same shape, form, plant height, plant groupings, colors, bed shapes, theme, etc. Formal gardens are almost always symmetrical. They display neat rows, mirrored images and/or geometric shapes. Informal or natural-looking gardens are asymmetrical but should be well-balanced. An asymmetrically balanced landscape design has the feeling of stability. Unity is maintained not through obvious patterns, but through consistent use of elements such as rocks, plants, and decor to ground the design. 63

A threshold is used to denote that you are entering a different space. Thresholds were very common in historic east Asian landscape architecture. They can be created a variety of ways. Some examples include: A step A change in ground surface material The end or beginning of a path A narrow entry way A prominent feature 64

Think of the beat of music. It doesn t have to be symmetrical like this image is, but rhythm is a repeated sequence of either height, form, color, etc. 65

Texture can be a link between something feels with how something looks. Textures help create visual interest. In a sensory style garden space, they can also create different feels. Soft Rigid Smooth Sharp 66

A focal point can be any special feature that draws the eye. Some options include: Fountain Overstated series of elements Statue A specimen plant, which is one unique plant that stands out from all the others 67

Remember that you want to make your landscape both beautiful and functional. 68

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What is the function of the space? In other words, what are you going to do in the space, if anything at all? It could also be that the function is just to provide visual beauty from your home or from the street. 70

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Plant species do not have to be selected at this step, but think about plant material as you re creating your initial plan. This plan should show your hardscape features, circulation and overall plant layout by size. You ll have a pretty good idea at this point of what plants you want there, but you can still make changes. 72

When choosing plants, you must take all of these characteristics into account. In the next several slides you ll see several genus of xeric plants that are great choices for any xeriscape in Aurora or the Colorado Front Range. 73

The sedum genus is a great choice for a xeriscape. Most are groundcovers, but Sedum Vera Jameson and Autumn Joy both are a bit taller. 74

Ornamental grasses are an important addition to the garden. They provide year-round seasonal interest and the element of graceful movement (and sound) to the summer, fall and winter garden. 75

Sandcherry is a beautiful, small shrub that has blazing fall color. 76

These shrubs are beautiful selections. Genista lydia is a brilliant spring bloomer, Fallugia paradoxa has fluffy seedheads in the summer, and Viburnum Mohican retains its leaves through fall and into winter. 77

Hesperaloe parviflora is not a true yucca, but the foliage and tall flower stalk are reminiscent of a real yucca. 78

Penstemon is a beautiful genus to have in your garden. They come in many, many colors, forms and heights. 79

The Salvia genus is another group that comes in many heights and colors. 80

Gallardia genus are a bright addition to the garden. Delosperma genus are lovely groundcovers in multiple colors. 81

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Now it s time to create your planting plan. You will draw out specific plant forms and sizes, but not the specific varieties yet. 83

Next, you ll finish up all of your plant research and assign species labels to each plant on your map. Symbols are always drawn to the plant s mature size. Create a Planting Legend Note the Symbol, Quantity, Bot. Name, Common Name, Size Create a Material Legend Use Hatches or Colors to denote ground materials on plan. Specify the following: Type, Color, Size, Quantity 84

To learn more about any of these programs, call 303-739-7195 and speak to a water conservation specialist. 85

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