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Academic & Professional Books  Botany  Plants & Gardens

Captured Landscape The Paradox of the Enclosed Garden

Out of Print
By: Kate Baker(Author)
224 pages, 211 colour & 38 b/w illustrations
Publisher: Routledge
Captured Landscape
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  • Captured Landscape ISBN: 9780415562294 Paperback Jan 2012 Out of Print #205474
  • Captured Landscape ISBN: 9780415562287 Hardback Jan 2012 Out of Print #205473
About this book Contents Biography Related titles

About this book

The enclosed garden, or hortus conclusus, is a place where architecture, architectural elements, and landscape, come together. It has a long history, ranging from the paradise garden and cloister, the botanic garden and the giardini segreto, the kitchen garden and the stage for social display, to its many modern forms; the city retreat, the redemptive garden, and the deconstructed building. By its nature it is ambiguous. Is it an outdoor room, or captured landscape; is it garden or architecture? Kate Baker discusses the continuing relevance of the typology of the enclosed garden to contemporary architects by exploring influential historical examples alongside some of the best of contemporary designs – brought to life with vivid photography and detailed drawings – taken mainly from Britain, the Mediterranean, Japan and South America. She argues that understanding the potential of the enclosed garden requires us to think of it as both a design and an experience.

As climate change becomes an increasingly important component of architectural planning, the enclosed garden, which can mediate so effectively between interior and exterior, provides opportunities for sustainable design and closer contact with the natural landscape. Study of the evolution of enclosed gardens, and the concepts they generate, is a highly effective means for students to learn about the design requirements of outdoor space proximal to the built environment.

Captured Landscape: The Paradox of the Enclosed Garden provides architectural design undergraduates, and practising architects, with a broad range of information and design possibilities. It will also appeal to landscape architects, horticulturalists and a wider audience of all those who are interested in garden design.

Contents

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

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Biography

Kate Baker is an architect and has been a lecturer at the University of Portsmouth since 1992. Before that she was a principal in an architectural firm, with 15 years of experience in architectural practice, and taught part-time at the University of Cambridge. She is particularly interested in the relationship between architecture and landscape, and our sensory perception of space. Baker is an active researcher and has published a range of papers in these subject areas.

Out of Print
By: Kate Baker(Author)
224 pages, 211 colour & 38 b/w illustrations
Publisher: Routledge
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