Captured Landscape: Architecture and the Enclosed Garden

Author:   Kate Baker (Portsmouth University, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Edition:   2nd edition
ISBN:  

9781138679245


Pages:   292
Publication Date:   16 May 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Captured Landscape: Architecture and the Enclosed Garden


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Full Product Details

Author:   Kate Baker (Portsmouth University, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Edition:   2nd edition
Weight:   0.720kg
ISBN:  

9781138679245


ISBN 10:   1138679240
Pages:   292
Publication Date:   16 May 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1. Defining the Territory 2. From Patio to Park 3. Taming Nature 4. Ritual and Emptiness 5. Sensory Seclusion 6. Detachment 7. Green City

Reviews

"“Throughout, Baker supplements objective analysis of particular sites with ‘experiential’ descriptions – observing such elements as acoustics, air-flow and light. While aimed at landscapists and architects, this book will be useful to anybody interested in designing space.” – Garden Design Journal ""Kate Baker is an architect and her real interest lies in seeing how places that are apparently cut off from the outside world in fact interact with it; how one can move in, through and out of them"" – Historic Gardens Review ""British architect and educator Kate Baker reviews the relevance of the enclosed garden in modern architecture and landscape design. Walled gardens have been landscape features for centuries; she finds that their long history continues in contemporary landscapes. Using examples from Britain, the Mediterranean, Japan, and South America, the author sets forth her argument that the walled enclosure is an option that designers should consider as a design possibility. The author does an admirable job in this study of the enclosed garden and opportunities for sustainable design."" - Marilyn K. Alaimo, Chicago Botanic Garden ""Baker leads readers to moments of discovery--hinting, nudging, and intuiting toward the realization that design is more than something attractive; it is something that comprises meaning at its core... Readers will gain a profound appreciation of the present as they allow built environments to inform through their own aesthetic... Highly recommended"" - S. Hammer, CHOICE, September 2012 ""One of the strengths of the book is the diversity of case studies that are included reinforcing the versatility of the enclosed garden as applied to different cultures, climates, landscapes and historic periods. This mix of old and new reinforces the importance of the enclosed garden throughout time and lays the foundation for a discussion about why the form remains relevant today as urban environments adapt to the challenges of climate change."" - Massachusetts Horticultural Society ""...this book is a valuable addition to current work on emotional/sensuous geographies and it sits well alongside existing investigations of the experience of the domestic garden and restorative landscapes and gardens. Meanwhile, the architectural analysis, historical background and the sheer breadth of case studies contained within makes it an admirable source book for those who will play a part in shaping our built environment. Hopefully for them, it will prove what a positive, profound and life-giving element the enclosed garden can be."" - Planning Perspectives"


Throughout, Baker supplements objective analysis of particular sites with `experiential' descriptions - observing such elements as acoustics, air-flow and light. While aimed at landscapists and architects, this book will be useful to anybody interested in designing space. - Garden Design Journal Kate Baker is an architect and her real interest lies in seeing how places that are apparently cut off from the outside world in fact interact with it; how one can move in, through and out of them - Historic Gardens Review British architect and educator Kate Baker reviews the relevance of the enclosed garden in modern architecture and landscape design. Walled gardens have been landscape features for centuries; she finds that their long history continues in contemporary landscapes. Using examples from Britain, the Mediterranean, Japan, and South America, the author sets forth her argument that the walled enclosure is an option that designers should consider as a design possibility. The author does an admirable job in this study of the enclosed garden and opportunities for sustainable design. - Marilyn K. Alaimo, Chicago Botanic Garden Baker leads readers to moments of discovery--hinting, nudging, and intuiting toward the realization that design is more than something attractive; it is something that comprises meaning at its core... Readers will gain a profound appreciation of the present as they allow built environments to inform through their own aesthetic... Highly recommended - S. Hammer, CHOICE, September 2012 One of the strengths of the book is the diversity of case studies that are included reinforcing the versatility of the enclosed garden as applied to different cultures, climates, landscapes and historic periods. This mix of old and new reinforces the importance of the enclosed garden throughout time and lays the foundation for a discussion about why the form remains relevant today as urban environments adapt to the challenges of climate change. - Massachusetts Horticultural Society ...this book is a valuable addition to current work on emotional/sensuous geographies and it sits well alongside existing investigations of the experience of the domestic garden and restorative landscapes and gardens. Meanwhile, the architectural analysis, historical background and the sheer breadth of case studies contained within makes it an admirable source book for those who will play a part in shaping our built environment. Hopefully for them, it will prove what a positive, profound and life-giving element the enclosed garden can be. - Planning Perspectives


Throughout, Baker supplements objective analysis of particular sites with `experiential' descriptions - observing such elements as acoustics, air-flow and light. While aimed at landscapists and architects, this book will be useful to anybody interested in designing space. - Garden Design Journal Kate Baker is an architect and her real interest lies in seeing how places that are apparently cut off from the outside world in fact interact with it; how one can move in, through and out of them - Historic Gardens Review British architect and educator Kate Baker reviews the relevance of the enclosed garden in modern architecture and landscape design. Walled gardens have been landscape features for centuries; she finds that their long history continues in contemporary landscapes. Using examples from Britain, the Mediterranean, Japan, and South America, the author sets forth her argument that the walled enclosure is an option that designers should consider as a design possibility. The author does an admirable job in this study of the enclosed garden and opportunities for sustainable design. - Marilyn K. Alaimo, Chicago Botanic Garden Baker leads readers to moments of discovery--hinting, nudging, and intuiting toward the realization that design is more than something attractive; it is something that comprises meaning at its core... Readers will gain a profound appreciation of the present as they allow built environments to inform through their own aesthetic... Highly recommended - S. Hammer, CHOICE, September 2012 One of the strengths of the book is the diversity of case studies that are included reinforcing the versatility of the enclosed garden as applied to different cultures, climates, landscapes and historic periods. This mix of old and new reinforces the importance of the enclosed garden throughout time and lays the foundation for a discussion about why the form remains relevant today as urban environments adapt to the challenges of climate change. - Massachusetts Horticultural Society ...this book is a valuable addition to current work on emotional/sensuous geographies and it sits well alongside existing investigations of the experience of the domestic garden and restorative landscapes and gardens. Meanwhile, the architectural analysis, historical background and the sheer breadth of case studies contained within makes it an admirable source book for those who will play a part in shaping our built environment. Hopefully for them, it will prove what a positive, profound and life-giving element the enclosed garden can be. - Planning Perspectives


Author Information

Kate Baker is an architect and has been a lecturer at the University of Portsmouth, UK, and previously at Cambridge University, UK. Before that, she was partner in an architectural practice. She is an active researcher in both architecture and landscape, and our sensory relationship with space.

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