919 resultados para Landscape architecture--Wisconsin---Lake Geneva
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Red, black ink on linen; topo. lines, elevaions; residence by A. Heun; survey "from copy of Greely Howard Survey, Sept. 1910, Anderson & Russell Nov. 1910 and notes taken Sept. 1911"; signed. 118x74 cm. Scale: 1"=50' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Ink on linen; location, type, amount of plantings; trellises, seats; residence by Arthur Heun; signed. 97x68 cm. Scale: 1"=10' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Ink on linen; location, type, amount of plantings for entire estate; residence by A. Heun; signed. 124x102 cm. Scale: 1"=30' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Ink on linen; signature smudged. 63x107 cm. Scale: 1"=50'124x102 cm. Scale: 1"=30' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Red, black, ink on linen; plan, sections; pools, vases; location, type of planatings; signed. 90x35 cm. Scale: 1"=16' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Ink on linen; plan of square, with some elevations, hydrants, etc.; unsigned. 89x45 cm. Scale: 1"=16' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Pencil on tracing paper; seats, council hill, player's nooks, council fire, rocks; section of grade; section of council fire; signed; 68 x 62 cm.; Scale: 1" = 10' [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Most outdoor plants in Hungarian horticulture are exotas mainly from Middle and East Asia and North America. The flora of China is diversified and has many species because the last glacial period did not reach China. The richness of the Chinese flora was known for Europeans by the missionaries and medics first in 19th cectury. Later some bigger nurseries sent expeditions in China to collect new plants. Nowadays the Hungarian landscape architecture is impossible without Chinese plants.
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Pinewood Estate is a significant resource in the history of the theory and practice of landscape architecture. The purpose of this thesis is to provide a landscape plan to restore the Pinewood Estate to its historic integrity in order to retain and reflect its past. In order to determine the criteria used to establish how and to what period the estate should be restored to, the Secretary of the Interior's Guidelines for the Treatment of Cultural Landscapes was followed. This process involved documenting the existing conditions of the estate. Site inventory and analysis and onsite interviews were conducted. Natural and cultural resources were evaluated. As a case study, McKee Botanical Garden was analyzed and evaluated. The comparison of this case study served as a guideline to determine the best practice for the historical preservation of the estate. Despite the changes in the landscape at Pinewood Estate over the past seventy years, the garden today still retains William Lyman Phillips design criteria. For the garden to continue to keep its historic fabric, rehabilitation was selected to allow for improvements that make possible efficient contemporary use of the estate.
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-08
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This thesis examines a design approach in landscape architecture in which cultural and historical values are reinterpreted in a contemporary urban environment. The site of this project is located in Managua's lakeside area, which was destroyed by hurricane Mitch in 1998. The lakeside area has been an attraction to Managua's residents because of its beautiful views and fresh breezes. The majority of Nicaragua's population is of indigenous descent; however, Managua's urban environment is predominantly of European influence. The pre-Columbian heritage of Nicaraguans is hidden in their cultural expressions, such as the names of places and religious rituals. This project provides a new lakeside area for Managua in which cultural identity in landscape architecture is represented in the use of the site and in a rescue of Managua's residents' pride in their pre-Columbian heritage. The lakeside renovation was planned using pre-Columbian design methodology and vocabulary to create a functional and environmentally sens~velandscape.