The Private Oasis: New Book Explores Glamorous & Doable Landscape & Garden Design
Just because I was
all whipped up with the launch of my own book, The
Hamptons & Long Island Homegrown Cookbook and so regrettably missed the glamorous garden book party for The Private Oasis: The Landscape
Architecture of Edmund Hollander Design heralded by its elegant invitation,
is no reason you should miss out:
For anyone who loves
gardens and good garden design, this swanky-looking book is a beauty to look at
– plus it’s like having your own private landscape architect interpret the
looks for your own garden space. Enjoy a
good garden read at the beach -- but then start taking design notes!
From the Amazon
review: Whether a home is a great place to live often depends on what lies
beyond its walls. The landscape - when it has a well-thought-out shape and
character - gives a home much of its character and satisfaction. In The Private
Oasis, two of New York's leading landscape architects, Edmund Hollander and
Maryanne Connelly, guide readers through a series of remarkable landscapes and
gardens, explaining how to apply their techniques, no matter what the size of
the reader's property.
Since founding
Edmund D. Hollander Landscape Architect Design in 1990, Hollander and Connelly
and the more than a dozen landscape architects on their staff have designed
hundreds of residential landscapes, from the palatial to the somewhat more
modest. Every landscape, they believe, has a story to tell. The aim of the landscape
architect, when working with the homeowners, the site, and the architecture of
the house, is to decide what that story is, and see that it is told well.
You can't plant
whatever you want, wherever you want it. You can't rearrange the earth arbitrarily.
You have to respond to the makeup of the land and its water flows, its
vegetation, wildlife and other features using that knowledge to fashion a
living landscape. That was a key precept Hollander and Connelly learned from
the pioneer of ecological planning, Ian McHarg, and it undergirds all their
thinking. Hollander and Connelly marry factors from nature to an understanding
of human ecology. Says Connelly: "The solution is always driven by who
will be using the landscape and how they will be using it."
The Private Oasis
focuses on built elements in the landscape including the entry, seating and
gathering places, outdoor dining, swimming pools and water features and tennis
courts. It is lavishly illustrated with over 1000 color photographs. A successor
volume will focus on plantings. Together, the two volumes will give readers a
comprehensive orientation to the making of residential landscapes.