A landscape architect is a person who is educated in the field of landscape architecture . The practice of landscape architecture includes: site analysis, site inventory, site planning , land planning, planting design, grading, storm water management, sustainable design , construction specification, and ensuring that all plans meet the current building codes and local and federal ordinances.
63-630: André Le Nôtre ( French pronunciation: [ɑ̃dʁe lə notʁ] ; 12 March 1613 – 15 September 1700), originally rendered as André Le Nostre , was a French landscape architect and the principal gardener of King Louis XIV of France. He was the landscape architect who designed the gardens of the Palace of Versailles ; his work represents the height of the French formal garden style, or jardin à la française . Prior to working on Versailles, Le Nôtre collaborated with Louis Le Vau and Charles Le Brun on
126-421: A bed so as that each bed shall be a mass of one colour, and the other is to plant flowers of different colours in the same bed. From the 20th century, apart from a few projects aimed at an authentic restoration, where enough information on the old designs exists, newly planted parterres tend to be small but with complex knot-type designs, much more thickly planted and often with higher box edges than would have been
189-473: A broad central gravel walk dividing paired plats , each subdivided in four, appears to have survived from the Palace's former (pre-1689) existence as Nottingham House. Subsidiary wings have subsidiary parterres, with no attempt at overall integration. At Prince Eugene's Belvedere Palace , Vienna, a sunken parterre before the façade that faced the city was flanked in a traditional fashion with raised walks from which
252-419: A grand, symmetrical arrangement of parterres , pools and gravel walks. Le Vau and Le Nôtre exploited the changing levels across the site, so that the canal is invisible from the house, and employed forced perspective to make the grotto appear closer than it really is. The gardens were complete by 1661, when Fouquet held a grand entertainment for the king. But only three weeks later, on 10 September 1661, Fouquet
315-533: A highly popular, mostly male, sport in England. There were other forms of ground billiards and lawn games , that evolved in the 19th century into sports such as croquet and lawn tennis . Before 1600 plats had already become usual for forecourts, which were left plain so as not to distract from the entrance front of the house. The English gardener Stephen Switzer wrote in 1718: Bowling-green or plain Parterres,
378-490: A lawn, perhaps with some gravel paths, as at Waddesdon Manor , a new-build of the late 1870s. Jane Loudon 's Gardening for Ladies (1845) says: Parterres of embroidery are now rarely to be met with either in France or England... Parterres of compartments... are at present common both in France and England...In a word, parterres are now assemblages of flowers in beds or groups, either on a ground of lawn or gravel... The shape of
441-735: A project for the Castle of Racconigi in Italy, and between 1674 and 1698 he remodelled the gardens of the Palace of Venaria , and the Royal Palace of Turin . In 1679, he visited Italy. Between 1679 and 1682, he was involved in the planning of the gardens of Château de Meudon for François-Michel le Tellier, Marquis de Louvois , and in 1691 redid the garden of the Hôtel de Saint-Aignan in Paris. His work has often been favorably compared and contrasted ("the antithesis") to
504-520: A recognised professional landscape architect in Australia, the first requirement is to obtain a degree in landscape architecture accredited by the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects . After at least two years of recognised professional practice, graduates may submit for further assessment to obtain full professional recognition by AILA. The Canadian Society of Landscape Architects (CSLA)
567-455: A wide range of often rather complicated designs, many harking back to the knot garden . "Open knots" were complicated designs without interlacing; many gentry owners designed these themselves. These were often more heavily planted with flowering plants, and this style was often used for flower gardens at the side of the house. At its simplest it might just be a group of rectangular flower beds, with alleys around them, or designs in "cutwork". In
630-463: Is denominated an " alley of compartiment ". But these remained relatively rare in England, where many earlier knot gardens were replaced with simpler designs of " quincunxes , squares or rectangles of grass set in gravel with perhaps some topiary, statues or plants in pots at the corners". Many parterre designs were only "cutwork" in grass and gravel, often of different colours. Reddish "brick dust", mostly brick waste crushed to gravel-sized pieces,
693-461: Is the country's professional association of landscape architects. Some notable Canadian landscape architects include Cornelia Oberlander , Claude Cormier , Peter Jacobs , Janet Rosenberg , Marc Ryan, and Michael Hough. The Landscape Institute is the recognised body relating to the field of Landscape Architecture throughout the United Kingdom. To become a recognised landscape architect in
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#1732854636618756-407: The atelier of Simon Vouet , painter to Louis XIII, where he met and befriended the painter Charles Le Brun . He learned classical art and perspective, and studied for several years under the architect François Mansart , a friend of Le Brun. In 1635, Le Nôtre was named the principal gardener of the king's brother Gaston, Duke of Orléans . On 26 June 1637, Le Nôtre was appointed head gardener at
819-573: The Champs-Élysées . Colbert commissioned Le Nôtre in 1670, to alter the gardens of his own Château de Sceaux , which was ongoing until 1683. Le Nôtre's most impressive design other than Versailles is the gardens of Bicton Park Botanical Gardens in Devon, England which can still be visited today. In 1662, he provided designs for Greenwich Park in London, for Charles II of England . In 1670 Le Nôtre conceived
882-474: The bosquet part of the garden rather than among the parterres. In French the name is also used for the game of bowls, and the greens it is played on. Several French writers were ready to concede the superiority of English grass, including Andre Mollet and Dezallier d'Argenville ; apart from the climate some attributed it to the selection of the turf and the frequency and quality of the cutting. Plats typically came in pairs, one on each side of an allée down
945-473: The gentry rather than noble magnates. Among the royal palaces, Somerset House was converted by Inigo Jones in the 1630s, and the Privy Gardens at Hampton Court Palace and Whitehall Palace by 1640. Whitehall had 16 relatively small plats with statues in the middle, and in 1662 a much larger bowling-green was added alongside. A plat could double as a bowling-green for early versions of lawn bowls ,
1008-412: The goldwork embroidery on diplomatic uniforms which some, mostly European, countries continue to use to the present day. At the time this style of ornament was used in many media in the decorative arts . The main motifs are usually wreaths and strapwork , more rarely they are in the shape of monograms and figures. Generally any hedging was very low, to enable the patterns to be readable from
1071-484: The œuvre of Capability Brown , the English landscape architect. André Le Nôtre was played by Matthias Schoenaerts in the 2014 film A Little Chaos . Landscape architect The practice of landscape architecture dates to some of the earliest of human cultures and just as much as the practice of medicine has been inimical to the species and ubiquitous worldwide for several millennia. However, this article examines
1134-450: The 1630s, elaborate parterres de broderie appeared at Wilton House in Wilton , England, that were so magnificent that they were engraved, which engraving is the only remaining trace of them. " Parterres de pelouse " or " parterres de gazon " denominate cutwork parterres of low growing herbs ( e.g. , camomile ) as much as closely scythed turf grass . The separation of plant beds of a parterre
1197-447: The 18th century and were superseded, within the naturalistic English landscape garden style, which emerged in England from the 1720s by flower gardens, or shrubberies from the mid-century, both very often planned round a snake-like serpentine path. In particular, Capability Brown , the most prolific garden designer of the mid-century, often brought a wide lawn right up to the terrace of the main garden front, to give Neoclassical houses
1260-493: The 19th century parterres were revived in a somewhat different form, coinciding with the availability of carpet bedding , the annual mass planting of non-hardy flowers as segments of colour which constituted a design. Level substrates and a raised vantage point from which to view the design were required, and so the parterre was revived in a modified style. By now a parterre often meant a collection of flower beds in fairly formal shapes, but often avoiding straight lines, arranged on
1323-537: The English Manner are the plainest and meanest of all. They should consist only of large Grass-plots all of a Piece, or cut but little, and be encompassed with a Border of Flowers, separated from the Grass-work by a Path of Two or Three Foot wide, laid smooth and sanded over, to make the greater Distinction As well as grass, English writers including Samuel Pepys and Sir William Temple also congratulated themselves on
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#17328546366181386-668: The Method of which they [the French] own to have receiv’d from England, .... [are] of the most Use, and is, above all, the beautifullest with us in England, on Account of the Goodness of our Turf, and that Decency and unaffected Simplicity which it affords to the Eye of the Beholder. On the continent a boulingrin (a mangled French version of "bowling-green") was a sunken compartment of fine lawn, typically found in
1449-473: The Tuileries, taking over his father's position. He had primary responsibility for the areas of the garden closest to the palace, including the orangery built by Simon Bouchard. In 1643 he was appointed "draughtsman of plants and terraces" for Anne of Austria , the queen mother, and from 1645 to 1646 he worked on the modernisation of the gardens of the Palace of Fontainebleau . He was later put in charge of all
1512-525: The UK takes approximately seven years. To begin the process, one has to study an accredited course by the Landscape Institute to obtain a bachelor's degree in landscape architecture or a similar field. Following this one must progress onto a postgraduate diploma in the field of landscape architecture covering the subject in far greater detail such as mass urban planning, construction, and planting. Following this,
1575-828: The UK, modern parterres exist at Trereife House in Penzance (Cornwall), at Drumlanrig Castle in Dumfriesshire and at Bodysgallen Hall near Llandudno . Examples can also be found in Ireland , such as at Birr Castle . One of the largest in Britain is at Cliveden in Buckinghamshire , which covers an area of 4 acres (1.6 ha; 160 a; 16,000 m ; 170,000 sq ft); it consists of symmetrical wedge-shaped beds filled with Nepeta ("catmint"), Santolina and Senecio , edged with box hedges. Sentinel pyramids of yew stand at
1638-504: The US, all 50 states have adopted licensure. The American Society of Landscape Architects endorses the postnominal letters PLA, for Professional Landscape Architect, even though there is no legal or professional distinction between the use of RLA or PLA. The Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) states that "Landscape Architects research, plan, design, and advise on the stewardship, conservation, and sustainability of development of
1701-462: The appearance of classical buildings in paintings by artists such as Claude Lorrain . Many English parterres were dug up as a result. The flowering plants were often moved to the side of the house. The parterre en broderie took its name from contemporary styles of metalwork embroidery ( broderie in French), then used in the most formal clothes of both men and women at court. Similar styles live on in
1764-425: The beds in either case depends on the style of architecture of the house to which the parterre belongs, or to the taste and fancy of the owner. Whatever shapes are adopted, they are generally combined into a symmetrical figure; for when this is not the case the collection of beds ceases to be a parterre, or a flower-garden...In planting parterres there are two different systems; one is to plant only one kind of flower in
1827-442: The case in the originals. A much larger number of Victorian parterres have survived in something like their original state, both in houses and public parks and other gardens, and these remain attractive to modern visitors. Many restored parterres are increasingly threatened by fungi and insects, especially the box tree moth , and alternative species are being explored, for example at RHS Wisley . Parterres tended to survive better
1890-406: The central axis. The garden at Ham House near London has been restored, following extensive research, to have a parterre of eight plats, four wide and two deep, facing the main garden front, with a replanted wilderness beyond. At the side of the house is a smaller and more complicated parterre in compartments, with flowers, now called the "Cherry Garden". Perhaps as a concession to modern taste,
1953-518: The ceremony was an administrator of the royal gardens, and his godmother was the wife of Claude Mollet. The family lived in a house within the Tuilieries, and André thus grew up surrounded by gardening, and quickly acquired both practical and theoretical knowledge. The location also allowed him to study in the nearby Palais du Louvre , part of which was then used as an academy of the arts. He learned mathematics , painting and architecture , and entered
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2016-582: The court at the Siege of Cambrai (1677) . In 1640, he married Françoise Langlois. They had three children, although none survived to adulthood. André Le Nôtre's first major garden design was undertaken for Nicolas Fouquet , Louis XIV's Superintendent of Finances. Fouquet began work on the Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte in 1657, employing the architect Louis Le Vau , the painter Charles Le Brun, and Le Nôtre. The three designers worked in partnership, with Le Nôtre laying out
2079-771: The environment and spaces, both within and beyond the built environment". This definition of the profession of landscape architect is based on the International Standard Classification of Occupations, International Labour Office, Geneva . Some notable Australian landscape architects include Catherin Bull , Kevin Taylor , Richard Weller , Peter Spooner , Sydney based writer and designer (Doris) Jocelyn Brown , Grace Fraser , Bruce Mackenzie, Mary Jeavons, Janet Conrad, Dr Jim Sinatra, William Guilfoyle , Ina Higgins , Edna Walling , and Ellis Stones . To become
2142-724: The environment in an area. In the U.S., a need to formalize the practice and a name for the profession was resolved in 1899 with the formation of the American Society of Landscape Architects . A few of the many talented and influential landscape architects who have been based in the United States are: Frederick Law Olmsted , Beatrix Farrand , Jens Jensen , Ian McHarg , Thomas Church , Arthur Shurtleff , Ellen Biddle Shipman John Nolen , Lawrence Halprin , Charles Edgar Dickinson , Iris Miller , and Robert Royston . Royston summed up one American theme: Landscape architecture practices
2205-565: The fine art of relating the structure of culture to the nature of landscape, to the end that people can use it, enjoy it, and preserve it. The following is an outline of the typical scope of service for a landscape architect: [REDACTED] Media related to Landscape architects at Wikimedia Commons Parterre A parterre is a part of a formal garden constructed on a level substrate, consisting of symmetrical patterns, made up by plant beds, plats, low hedges or coloured gravels, which are separated and connected by paths. Typically it
2268-531: The further east one went in Europe, and the imperial Russian palaces have many of the best remaining examples. At Kensington Palace, the planting of the parterres was by Henry Wise , whose nursery was nearby at Brompton . In an engraving from 1707 to 1708, the up-to-date Baroque designs of each section are clipped scrolling designs, symmetrical around a centre, in low hedging punctuated by trees formally clipped into cones; however, their traditional 17th century layout,
2331-448: The house, and with the taller areas of the garden beyond. This made the parterre both a place to be seen - typically everyone walking in the parterre, and observers from around it, could see everyone else - but also a place for the most private conversations, as no one else could approach without being seen. The paths are constituted with gravel or (much less often in historical examples) with turf grass . French parterres developed from
2394-465: The king is said to have arrived for dinner with the garden in one colour of flowers, which had all been changed to another colour by the time he left. The relatively small and enclosed garden of the Trianon, originally called the "Palace of Flora", was in effect the flower garden of Versailles, and Le Notre said in 1694 that 2,000,000 flower pots were used there over a year. Parterre gardens lost favour in
2457-656: The largest avenue yet seen in Europe, the Avenue de Paris. In the following century, the Versailles design influenced Pierre Charles L'Enfant 's master plan for Washington, D.C. See, L'Enfant Plan . In 1661, Le Nôtre was also working on the gardens at the Palace of Fontainebleau . In 1663 he was engaged at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye , and the Château de Saint-Cloud , residence of Philippe I, Duke of Orléans , where he would oversee works for many years. Also from 1663, Le Nôtre
2520-691: The main rooms facing the garden of the bel étage of the house. New houses were often given wide high terraces, from which the parterre could be admired; these were filled in summer with greenhouse plants in pots. No Baroque broderie parterres have been preserved in their entirety in the original, but in the late 20th century there have been increasing attempts to reconstruct them. In Germany, for example, those of Schloss Augustusburg in Brühl (around 1730) or Schwetzingen (1753–1758) have been reconstructed. In England parterres en broderie were always rare, "probably there were never more than twenty examples of it in
2583-459: The mid-20th century, as interest in Baroque gardens revived, garden designers have made many attempts to recreate or to restore Baroque parterres, at least as regards the layout; planting often continues to be much thicker, and the height of hedges higher, than would have been the case in the originals. Claude Mollet , from a dynasty of nurserymen-designers that lasted into the 18th century, developed
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2646-566: The modern profession and educational discipline of those practicing the design of landscape architecture. In the 1700s, Humphry Repton described his occupation as "landscape gardener" on business cards he had prepared to represent him in work that now would be described as that of a landscape architect. The title, "landscape architect", was first used by Frederick Law Olmsted , the designer of New York City's Central Park in Manhattan and numerous projects of large scale both public and private. He
2709-583: The nobler Diversions of the Country take place ... [after the end of May]... when the Beauty of Flowers is gone, and Borders are like Graves, and rather a Blemish than Beauty to our finest gardens. In top gardens flowers in parterres were typically grown in pots in the greenhouse, and placed into the parterre only for as long as their blooms lasted. This was the system at the Grand Trianon sub-palace at Versailles, where
2772-401: The originals from the 17th and 18th centuries had far fewer than modern survivals or reconstructions. Statues or small evergreen trees, clipped as pyramids or other shapes, often marked points in the pattern, and an allée of medium-sized trees often ran along the side. Otherwise, the parterre was normally an area of openness, with the various elements very low, contrasting with the height of
2835-542: The park at Vaux-le-Vicomte . His other works include the design of gardens and parks at Bicton Park Botanical Gardens , Chantilly , Fontainebleau , Saint-Cloud and Saint-Germain . His contribution to planning was also significant: at the Tuileries in Paris he extended the westward vista, which later became the Avenue des Champs-Élysées within the Axe historique . André Le Nôtre
2898-466: The parterre in France . His inspiration in developing the 16th-century patterned compartimens ( i.e. , simple interlaces formed of herbs, either open and infilled with sand, or closed and filled with flowers) was the painter Etienne du Pérac, who returned from Italy to the Château d'Anet near Dreux , France, where he and Mollet were working. Around 1595, Mollet introduced compartment-patterned parterres to
2961-462: The parterres in the gardens of Versailles are rather muted; those in palace gardens in the Holy Roman Empire and in eventually Russian-controlled eastern Europe, are often more extensive and extravagant. Parterre-style areas reappeared in many large gardens from the mid-19th century, now much more lavishly planted with bedded-out flowers, and with less strictly geometrical designs. From around
3024-469: The pattern could best be appreciated. To either side, walls with busts on herm pedestals backed by young trees screen the parterre from the flanking garden spaces. Formal baroque patterns have given way to symmetrical paired free scrolling rococo arabesques, against the gravel ground. Little attempt seems to have been made to fit the framework to the shape of the parterre. Beyond (in the shadowed near foreground) paired basins have central jets of water. In
3087-411: The patterned compartments of French Renaissance gardens , what are called in England " knot gardens ". Later, in the 17th century Baroque garden , they became more elaborate and stylised, on the continent often using the parterre en broderie style of spreading and curving branches, derived from embroidery . The French formal garden parterre inspired many similar parterres throughout Europe, though
3150-430: The plats are now planted with 500,000 spring bulbs and wild flowers, which are unlikely to have been an original feature. To the French a parterre anglais (or a la anglais or a la angloise ) meant in the Baroque period a plat edged with a thin border ( plate-bande ) of low flowers. Antoine Dezallier d’Argenville 's English translation, The Theory and Practice of Gardening (1712) described these: PARTERRES after
3213-535: The range of designs in boxwood that a horticulturist should be able to cultivate: Parterres are the low embellishments of gardens, which have great grace, especially when seen from an elevated position: they are made of borders of several shrubs and sub-shrubs of various colours, fashioned in different manners, as compartments, foliage, embroideries ( passements ), moresques , arabesques , grotesques , guilloches , rosettes, sunbursts ( gloires ), escutcheons , coats-of-arms , monograms and emblems ( devises ). By
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#17328546366183276-515: The royal gardens of Saint-Germain-en-Laye and Fontainebleau . The fully developed scrolling embroidery-like parterres en broderie first appear in Alexandre Francini's engraved views of the revised horticultural plans of Fontainebleau and Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1614. Clipped boxwood met with resistance from horticultural patrons for its "naughtie smell" as the herbalist Gervase Markham described it. By 1638, Jacques Boyceau described
3339-519: The royal gardens of France, and in 1657 he was further appointed Controller-General of the Royal Buildings. There are few direct references to Le Nôtre in the royal accounts, and Le Nôtre himself seldom wrote down his ideas or approach to gardening. He expressed himself purely through his gardens. He became a trusted advisor to Louis XIV, and in 1675 he was ennobled by the King. He and Le Brun even accompanied
3402-461: The superiority of the native gravels. From about 1670, perhaps under the influence of Versailles, those English owners who could afford them began to install fountains, generally where alleys between plats met up. Statues in or around 17th-century English parterres tended to be castings in lead from the Low Countries, painted to resemble marble or bronze. The third main type of parterre covered
3465-573: The trainee must complete the Pathway to Chartership, a challenging program set out by the Landscape Institute. Following this, one is awarded a full landscape architect title and membership among the Chartered Members of the Landscape Institute (CMLI). The United States is the founding country of the formal profession entitled landscape architecture. Those in this field work both to create an aesthetically pleasing setting and also to protect and preserve
3528-523: The whole of England". However, Hampton Court was one prominent example. A plat (in America entangled with the same word as used for a plot of building land ) was a parterre section of plain grass lawn, perhaps with a central feature such as a fountain or statue, and small clipped trees at the corners. A stretch of good lawn was much admired, and these were rather surprisingly popular, especially in England, where year-round rainfall usually meant summer watering
3591-476: Was a popular addition to stone. These required less maintenance, and looked good from the upper storeys of the house. In country houses the owner was often only in residence in the summer, when the relatively small range of flowers available at the time had mostly finished their display. Stephen Switzer , an English gardener of the early 18th century, advised against using flowers at all in country house gardens for this reason, an extreme position, not often followed:
3654-408: Was arrested for embezzling state funds, and his artists and craftsmen were taken into the king's service. From 1661, Le Nôtre worked for Louis XIV to build and enhance the garden and parks of the Palace of Versailles . Louis extended the existing hunting lodge, eventually making it his primary residence and seat of power. Le Nôtre also laid out the radiating city plan of Versailles , which included
3717-527: Was born in Paris ,a family of gardeners. Pierre Le Nôtre, who was in charge of the Tuileries Garden in 1572, may have been his grandfather. André's father Jean Le Nôtre was also responsible for sections of the Tuileries gardens, initially under Claude Mollet , and later as head gardener, during the reign of Louis XIII . André was born on 12 March 1613, and was baptised at the Église Saint-Roch . His godfather at
3780-463: Was engaged at the Château de Chantilly , the property of the Prince de Condé , where he worked with his brother-in-law Pierre Desgots until the 1680s. From 1664 he was rebuilding the gardens of the Tuileries, at the behest of Colbert , Louis's chief minister, who still hoped the king would remain in Paris. In 1667 Le Nôtre extended the main axis of the gardens westward, creating the avenue which would become
3843-476: Was the founder of a firm of landscape architects who employed highly skilled professionals to design and execute aspects of projects designed under his auspices. Depending on the jurisdiction, landscape architects who pass state requirements to become registered, licensed, or certified may be entitled to use the postnominal letters corresponding to their seal, typically RLA (Registered Landscape Architect) or more recently, PLA (Professional Landscape Architect) n. In
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#17328546366183906-587: Was the part of the garden nearest the house, perhaps after a terrace. The view of a parterre from inside the house, especially from the upper floors, was a major consideration in its design. The word "parterre" was and is used both for the whole part of the garden containing parterres and for each individual section between the "alleys". The pattern or the borders of the beds may be marked by low, tightly pruned, evergreen hedging , and their interiors may be planted with flowers or other plants or filled with mulch or gravel. Parterres need not have any flowers at all, and
3969-522: Was unnecessary to keep a green surface. Other terms included tapis vert ("green carpet"), the name given to the huge one in the Gardens of Versailles . In French plat means "flat". The placing of plats in the most prominent positions of the "best garden" seems to have begun in England in the 1630s, and over the rest of the century a parterre section entirely consisting of plats became a distinct English style, probably used in most gardens, especially those of
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