Category Archives: International Landscape Architecture

‘Hamani’ by Keith

 

Flowering cherry trees

Spring has arrived at last and there are finally signs of seasonal change in the landscape. However, despite a few passing remarks by newsreaders, weathermen and neighbours, the arrival of spring in the UK is not heralded with much fuss. The changing seasons are one of the joys of living in a temperate climate as they add a richness and rhythm to the year and there are always subtle changes to be spotted in nature. Noticing the first snowdrop or daffodil in the garden is always a sure sign that winter is, at last, nearly over.

In Japan, another temperate country, this time of year is marked with altogether much more sense of occasion. The season of hanami or ‘flower viewing’ (almost always referring to cherry blossom) is a national event and is eagerly anticipated. The progress of the sakura zensen or ‘cherry blossom front’ as it moves northwards across the archipelago is tracked by the Japanese Meteorological Agency and the public follow nightly forecasts allowing them to predict its arrival in their region.

Cherry blossom timetable

The progress of the opening blossoms is plotted on this hotel lobby chart to enable visitors to find the best spots

 

 The reason for all this anticipation is the centuries-old tradition of holding outdoor parties beneath trees laden with cherry blossom. Areas in parks are cordoned off and groups of friends and families claim the best spots by laying down groundsheets. Wrapped in coats and blankets (but with shoes politely removed) food and drink is served, no matter how cold and damp it may be. Paper lanterns are strung up in some parks to enable the parties to continue into the night whilst less hardy visitors flood parks, gardens and cemeteries to photograph and be photographed with the blossom.

Flowering cherry trees in Japan

Hamani parties beneath the trees in Tokyo
People eager to be photographed with the blossom in Kyoto

 

The practice of hanami dates back over a thousand years and was originally used to predict the forthcoming harvest and herald the rice-planting season. People believed in spirits living in the trees, left offerings and drank sake. The Japanese proverb ‘dumplings rather than flowers’ hints that for some the food and drink may be the most important part of hanami nowadays, although it is clear to see how much delight the Japanese people get from the simple act of viewing the blossom-laden boughs. Part of this pleasure is explained by the Japanese term mono no aware which is used to describe the transience of things and a gentle sadness at their passing.

Back at home in Hampshire, whilst there are no lanterns and no al-fresco parties (to my knowledge) the roadside blackthorn and the glimpsed view of a neighbour’s cherry tree that I can see from my sitting-room window have taken on an altogether greater significance knowing that on the other side of the world a whole nation holds them in such great esteem.

Cherry blossom in a drink

Anyone for a cherry blossom martini?

 

For those looking to hold their own British-style hanami, Batsford Arboretum , Gloucestershire http://www.batsarb.co.uk/ and Keele University, Staffordshire both have excellent collections of flowering cherries. If you want to go one step further and replicate this in your own garden two of the varieties most beloved of the Japanese are Prunus subhirtella ‘Pendula’ and Prunus x yedoensis.

End of year TF note from Lionel

A fortnight to Christmas and as 2012 draws to a close we are all feeling rather weary after an exceptionally busy yea,r but grateful to be in good health (in every way) given recession is still so prevalent around us. Extraordinary though it may be, this has proved to be the busiest year Terra Firma has ever had in its 27+ year history and it’s looking likely to see the corresponding best figures on record. Alshamsi Terra Firma are following with a rapidly increasing workload too. We can’t be entirely sure why but we do hope it’s a shared (or soon to be shared) experience for everyone in coming out of the difficult last few years. However, we should never be complacent, things can change in all directions at short notice but we should appreciate it and be thankful when things are going well. So a big thank you to all clients and colleagues for things they put our way and long may it continue.

Lionel and Hada outside the Inner Mongolia Museum, near our Hohhot site in November

As ASTF simultaneously update their website news, we have counted up 133 live projects being handled by 16 staff between the 2 offices, currently spanning 10 countries (we total 23 over last 5 years). New ones to us include projects in Turkey and China, which Alistair and I respectively visited in the last couple of weeks. As ever, every scale and sector is represented, from large scale masterplans and environmental assessments down to small open spaces and individual gardens. We have assisted Local Authorities assess planning applications and major developers plan large mixed use communities. We continue to advise on one of Europe’s largest mineral extraction proposals and in a voluntary capacity have given considerable time in assisting the production of our local Parish Plan, sat on East Hants District Council’s architects advisory panel and the newly formed South Downs National Park Authority design review panel. Although we rarely enter ourselves for awards, we felt very much part of Churchill Retirement Living’s extraordinary performance in this years Over 50’s Housing Awards, winning the top awards both UK and worldwide, and as part of Radian Housing’s team for Sustainable Homes 2012’s top project with Stoneham Green, Southampton’s first zero carbon footprint social housing project, opened by Kevin McCloud this spring.

The Sustainable Homes Awards 2012

We said goodbye to Ramune Sanderson in March, when she returned to her native Lithuania after 8 excellent years with us. She is now lead Landscape Architect for Vilnius’ city parks and has also been asked to look into setting up a Landscape Architecture course at her old University there where she studied for her degree in architecture before joining us. We welcomed Isla Denton-Thompson in her place at more junior level and again, another Masters graduate of Greenwich. She has settled in very well during an immensely busy period when we have also been augmented by three freelancers since the summer, one of whom, Keith Baker, will come onto our books full time in January. Tom Jenner became a father for the first time this summer and Martin Hird is anticipating following him into fatherhood next spring.

I’d like to take the opportunity to thank all TF associates, staff and freelancers for the tremendous effort this year – we still all manage to have fun – and extend it to Alistair and his crew in Duba, Jamie, for all he does here and there; the regular sub consultants Bernie, Tim and Rob; all the admin headed up by Ally and marketing and IT support in the background from Mike Linnane, Visual Assets and Cyan. Our annual calendars come out this week. If you happen to receive this and have not received one but would like one, just let us know.

Been a good year for the UK; 2012 with all the jubilee celebrations and Olympics. Yet as always there are some sad notes. Just last week our friend, and fellow Hampshire landscape architect, Liz Ford passed away from cancer. She was a lovely person, highly respected colleague and will be very much missed. We have also learned that our founder and my ex partner John Wigham is engaging with his own fight with cancer. We all wish him well at a difficult time.

As we look to the New Year we wish you all the very best for 2013.

Lionel and Terra Firma

 

‘A tale of two seafronts’: A landscape architect on holiday

Portsmouth (UK). Nice (France). Poles apart. More accurately 804 miles apart. But worlds apart in terms of seafronts? Don’t get me wrong, I like both. My summer has been split between them and I have been struggling with the thought that I should somehow remark on the contrasts for a blog post.

Let’s take Portsmouth first: A thriving and busy city on the UK’s south coast. Miles of pebbly beach and a long promenade.

Looking south west along the beach towards Southsea Pier

And Nice: A thriving and busy city on France’s south coast. Miles of pebbly beach and a long promenade.

Looking south west around the Bay of Angels

Of course there is the obvious difference. Climate. This aside, I think they are similar in other respects. Both attract thousands of people on a sunny summer day. The beaches are full, skin is bared and sun cream applied. Food? Well Portsmouth has the usual array of British seaside fare; Nice has posh restaurants on the beach itself, which raises another difference. Tides. Today, in Portsmouth, the tide will rise by around 4m between low and high tides. Today, in Nice, the tide will rise by a meagre 25cm. This makes permanent beach structures possible. Portsmouth on the other hand…

Southsea Common War memorial

But wait! See below; this is Nice – with the world famous (and prohibitively expensive) Hotel Negresco peeping out of the background. What happens to all those beach restaurants in a storm?

Hotel Negresco

So which prom came first?

Before urbanization tourists visiting Nice in the 18th century did not come for the beach, but for the gentle winter weather; the coast line was a deserted stretch of beach covered with large pebbles, with houses located on higher ground, well away from the sea. In the second half of the 18th century, wealthy English people started spending the winter in Nice, enjoying the panoramic coastal views. Apparently, during a particularly harsh winter further north in France, there was an influx of beggars to Nice. Some of the rich Englishmen proposed a useful project for them: the construction of a walkway along the sea; the ‘Promenade des Anglais’.

The construction of Portsmouth’s ‘Clarence Esplanade’ began in 1848 with a public subscription and the Treasury donating £300; land was given by the War Department for free. Convict labour was used for the construction and the first section between the Kings Rooms and Southsea Castle opened that August. For the construction thousands of tons of mud and shingle were brought from the dockyard where the steam basin was also being built. The promenade was named after the father of the Governor of the Garrison, Lord Frederick Fitzclarence, after he remarked that “an admirable promenade could be made along Southsea beach.’

So there you have it. Portsmouth is older by a whisker, but both promenades were built with enforced labour. Portsmouth could even have inspired Nice…

I love Portsmouth; long walks in the winter along the prom wrapped up well and braced against the fresh sea air; marvellous sausage sandwiches in the Big Wheel Café at Clarence Pier; the surreal view from Southsea Common of enormous ferries seemingly trundling across the edge of the grass; the Kite Festival; the endless people-watching.

I love Nice; long summer evening walks along the prom wearing a summer dress and flip flops; baguettes with my great love goats cheese and fresh tomatoes stuffed inside; the never ending stream of aeroplanes landing at the airport; the evening summer festivities with live music; the endless people-watching.

So I declare it a draw and will continue to split my time between the two. Slightly unevenly, as I would struggle to commute to work from Nice, but roll on the next Grand Tour across Europe, destination South of France. 11 months and counting.

Worlds apart? Not so far really.

Alshamsi Terrafirma Dubai

Water wall completed at Al Muneera, Abu Dhabi. Experiment with bringing in a short  movie clip.

Recently returned from a week with the Gulf office. Always good to renew contacts, follow up new leads, catch up on projects and see some completed ones. Alistair and the team pretty full on with things in UAE, Saudi, Oman, Kuwait and now Qatar. We had fun at Abu Dhabi’s Cityscape exhibition identifying sites we’d been involved wit in the city. Picture below only shows half the story but can’t display all the things we are involved with down town…but good to hear Hard Rock Hotel is definitely going to be built this year .

Cityscape model at Abu Dhabi with a few ASTF involvements highlighted

 

Hard Rock Hotel, Abu Dhabi; Architect Aedas with landscape and roof terraces by ASTF

 Did not prevent us from a good day of R and R at end of the week up at Ras al Khaimah at Duncan’s house then out on  Alistair’s boat..

ASTF Directors off RAK April 27th

 

 

Designing with sketch up, Fanr Restaurant at Manarat Al Saadiyat

A note on Landscape Architectural design process from Alistair Walby, Director Alshamsi Terra Firma , Dubai:

We have recently completed a courtyard design and whilst we cannot show any of the details of the scheme we can illustrate the process undertaken with models of an older scheme. This has the benefit of being constructed and photographed. We used the sketch up model to get a feel for the scale of the space and how our water feature fitting within it, and then to refine the detail of the water feature which had a set of specific client requirements:-
• It had to look like a traditional middle-eastern irrigation channel, known as a ‘falaj’.
• It had to be expansive but quiet enough for comfortable conversations in the
context of a restaurant.
• It had to somehow introduce planting into the space

Falaj irrigation channels

It’s always a buzz to see concept images, design drawings, now sketch up models closely matching the final product and whilst the design may change for various reasons when we know that it is because of client requirements or design constraints which have to be respected, and not because we have lost our way in terms of design, then the pleasure is maintained.

Our more recent project allowed us to refine and inform the construction details we were simultaneously producing, highlighting detailed design issues such as junctions of vertical and horizontal elements, accommodating drainage fixtures within paving patterns and ensuring the copings, light fixtures, landscape walls and architectural walls were coordinated.

The process of constructing the model was quick and easy. We worked in an office shared with architects and engineers using 3d software which was necessarily complex but time consuming and had the added benefit of producing a model which when rendered even basically, and had shadows and people added easily managed to conjure the scale, topography and atmosphere of a the space which so far only existing in our imaginations.

3D Sketch Up models produced by ASTF in developing Falaj themed water feature for Fanr Restaurant

This was particularly useful bearing in mind we were working with a client unused to reading 2d plans and elevations and whilst we have had some negative reactions from people who were used to seeing photo realistic visualisations produced relatively cheaply by specialist companies, generally other consultants understand what they are looking at.

Our philosophy was to use the sketch up model as a design tool not as a visualisation product but as a result of using the software, we had both.

The finished product; Fanr Restaurant Garden , Saadiyat Cutural Centre, Abu Dhabi

Is landscape a matter of fashion? – By Ramune

I have just come back from the Netherlands where I visited Van Den Berk tree nurseries to choose and tag some semi-mature trees for a project we have in Hertfordshire.  Something of a circulatory in all of this being one of the last projects I shall put on the ground for Terra Firma before returning to Lithuania (and more about that another time). When I first started here 8 years ago Lionel was keen I obtained some practical horticultural experience to compliment my architectural degree and referred me to Hilliers where I worked Part Time in their big tree nursery while also starting at Terra Firma. So I am very familiar with the large tree transplanting process and how very satisfying  it is! Continue reading

2012: Landscapes of the future

I was recently on a flight toBarbados (just had to get that in) and I was reading ‘predictions for 2012’ in the on-flight magazine. Several ‘experts’ independently see this new year heralding a mass yearning to get away from the fast-paced digital age and experience something a bit ‘rustic’. People will want to visit places where their Blackberries don’t work. Apparently there’ll be new markets in more adventurous tourism, with people wanting to explore places that have never appealed before. I expect that going somewhere without the luxury facilities we’ve demanded in the past will also be a bit cheaper – perhaps not a coincidence. Continue reading

End of the year !

Well its come around to me to write again and I simply can’t believe we have reached Christmas and the end of the year. Its had its moments, as no doubt has been the experience for most businesses in recent years since recession kicked in but we really feel pretty fortunate to still be working on some great projects and with some bright prospects for 2012.

One Drummond Gate, Pimlico, completed in the summer.

We have only recently heard that the Interserve team, of which we are a part, has effectively won (by becoming ‘preferred bidder’) the PFI contract to design, build and operate 3 major HQ and Training facility projects for West Yorks Police, something for which we have done a tremendous amount of up front work already. Continue reading

Thoughts on green infrastructure in Lithuania by Ramune Sanderson

I have recently been back to my native Lithuania, where I’ve attended the annual general meeting of the Lithuanian Association of Landscape Architects and received a commendation from the Ministry of Environment for one of Terra Firma’s projects submitted for the awards ceremony. This has been specifically commended for the good use of methodology in regenerating industrial landscape. I also had many discussions about the importance of the politics of green urbanism and the current economical situation’s influence on status of the landscape architecture. As always, I left these events with a head full of thoughts and the nagging feeling that a plan of action must be started. Admittedly, coming over from the every day landscape life of a western European country,Lithuaniawith its Baltic neighbours does seem like a country full of opportunities. However, this is contrary to the views of a lot of Lithuanian based colleagues I have spoken to. Continue reading

Terra Firma in Transylvania

I don’t think my feet have touched the ground since returning from my fieldwork in Romania two weeks ago. My work with Terra Firma has sent me there twice before, but this time I was accompanied by Ramune on her first visit to the Transylvanian Goldfields. I knew I was in for a bumpy ride (literally), but Ramune quickly learned that our fieldwork would be far more intrepid than usual.

Terra Firma at work in Romania

Ramune doing fieldwork in Corna Valley

Rosia Montana Gold Corporation (RMGC) have appointed us to extend the Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment (LVIA) study we previously carried out for the setting of the historic village of Rosia Montana. Our job is to demonstrate that the proposed open-cast gold mining operations can be acceptable in the landscape context, and integrate with the existing cultural heritage. Considering the nature of extracting the rock from the mountain sides, that’s not an easy task from the perspective of a Landscape Architect. However, this project is a truly fascinating one, bringing into play so many facets of related criteria, (such as sociology, demography, archaeology, biodiversity, economics, mining technology and the science of decontamination techniques) which go to make-up a genuine need for the industry. Continue reading