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Design Theory: a Pattern-Assisted-Knowledge-Intensive-Landscape-Design-Approach
PAKILDA Return to index to Design Theory Guide (/history_theory/garden_landscape_design_articles/design_methods)
This article by Tom Turner, which has been amended, was published in the May 2001 edition of Landscape Design (#300 pp37-40).
It followed a 1991 article on Pattern analysis(#Pattern analysis) .
For two centuries the art of landscape design has failed to realize its potential, in Europe and America. A few glorious moments are
dispersed in a wasteland of kitsch, slabs and grass (Trancik(#Trancik) ). To make this point, Peter Walker and Melanie Simo
(#Simo) chose the title Invisible gardensfor their survey of American landscape architecture in the twentieth century. With awondrous natural environment, expert professionals, brilliant leadership and immense wealth, America junked its urban
opportunities. We have a profession which needs to ask What went wrong and then How can it be put right? In short, my answer
is that Modernism caused the problem and a pattern-analysis-knowledge-intensive-approach (PAKILDA) can put it right. This
proposition will be addressed from the standpoints of art theory, landscape theory, design history and design methods. As John
Dixon Hunt(#Hunt, J.D) observes, the problem arose circa 1800.
Art Theory
Plato(../tt/plato.htm) , with his Theory of Forms, argued that universals, like Beauty, Truth, Squareness and Roundness, exist in a
world which is ontologically apart from our own world. Humans see imperfect copies of the perfect Forms after which our world was
shaped .
The artists task, therefore, is to represent the ideal world, not the transitory scenes of everyday life. Encapsulated in the axiom art
should imitate nature this proposition dominates the history of Western art. It influenced Greek, Roman, Christian and Renaissance
art. It led to formal gardens and to the representation of ideal figures and landscapes during the Neoclassical era. When the
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predominant understanding of nature shifted from rationally perceived ideals to an empirically perceived everyday world, it led to
genre painting, romanticism and impressionism. Abstract art, in the twentieth century was founded on a revived interest in the
Platonic Forms and a desire to analyse nature. Cezanne saw his work as doing Poussin entirely from nature and treating nature
by the cylinder, the sphere, the cone. Cubism, Constructivism, Minimalism and Land Art grew from the same rich earth.
Postmodernism, being pluralist, looks for many natures.
Landscape Theory
When nature was used to mean essence, the axiom art should imitate nature led to the making of geometrical gardens. With the
onset of rational and empirical methods in the first centuries of the modern era (c1400- c1700), nature came to mean the everyday
world. The ancient axiom of western art then led to the design of serpentine and irregular estate layouts. By 1800, under the
influence of Repton, Price and Knight, a landscape garden had become one with a transition from a geometrical area near the
house, through a serpentine park to an irregular background. Hunt describes these regions as Three Natures.
Classical landscape theory lost its way when a landscape became a geographical entity, rather than a goal for the design process.
In 1996 I represented this state of affairs with three stakes driven into the heart of landscape theory (Fig 2).
We need to re-affirm that landscape, the professions keyword, refers to a good outdoor place. We do notuse the word, like
geographers, to mean the end product of shaping processes or agents. Semantic precision is crucial to the regeneration of
landscape theory.
A design theory is a system of ideas explaining how to conduct a design procedure. Landscape theory is concerned with how to
design with the five key elements of outdoor space: landform, buildings, water, vegetation and paving. Vitruvius and Alberti wrote on
the subject. Repton became the pre-eminent landscape theorist writing in English and his most notable successors were Olmsted,
Geddes, Jellicoe, McHarg, Spirn and Hough. Let us take an overview of their work.
Repton was mainly involved with country estates but his sons, working with John Nash, transmitted his ideas into what became
known as picturesque town planning. The first great example (Fig 3) was the process ional route from St James s Park via Regent
Street and Portland Place to Regents Park. At that time Regents Park was a green lung and green belt segment on the edge of London.
The description of Londons parks as lungs came from Reptons patron, William Wyndham. William Light admired the plan and the idea
was taken up by Ebenezeer Howard. The biographical links are tenuous but the development of the idea is well-documented.
Repton belonged to the eighteenth century, Olmsted to the nineteenth. Both were small-time farmers with liberal inclinations.
Olmsted was an urban Repton. In conceptual terms, Central Park NY is not far removed from Woburn Abbey and Regents Park,
though it forms the centerpiece of the most remarkable twentieth century city. Olmsted used serpentine boulevards (parkways) to
link Prospect Park to the sea and went on to design the world-famous Emerald Necklace in Boston as a major example of
picturesque town planning.
Patrick Geddes(#Geddes) has been strangely neglected by landscape theorists. He was: a park designer, the author of a brilliant
comment on park planning, the first UK citizen to use landscape architect as a professional title and the most influential planning
author of the twentieth century. From a background in evolutionary biology Geddes developed an approach to landscape planning
and design which is encapsulated in the adage Place-Work-Folk (Fig 4).
Familiar with the work of Repton and Olmsted, it was Geddes who introduced the full range of geographical considerations into
landscape architecture and town planning. Geddes may also have been responsible, inadvertently, for the Survey-Analysis-Design
(SAD) method which dominated landscape design in the second half of the twentieth century. The method was modernist and
technocratic.
In the landscape profession, McHarg is the chief inheritor of Geddes. The Scots firebrands who dominate modern landscape theory
were born on the Highland Line, 50 miles and 60 years apart. One was the child of a minister. Both were well-suited to the cloth.
The origins of McHargs overlay method have been traced by Steinitz and include other landscape planners who, like Jacqueline
Tyrwhitt, were inspired by Geddes. McHarg may have been less-imaginative than Geddes but he had greater logical clarity and
better graphics. McHarg inspired Spirn and Hough to apply his environmental vision at the design scale. McHarg also has a key
place in the development of the Geographical Information Systems(#LPEID) (GIS) which are set to become the landscape
professions primary software tool (Fig 5).
For landscape architects, the attraction of McHargs overlay procedure(#Steinitz) is the way it brings a wide range of scientific
knowledge and design considerations into relationship with one another. The overlays are environmental pattern analysis diagrams.
Lewis Mumford(#Mumford) , a disciple of Geddes, wrote of McHarg that It is in this mixture of scientific insight and constructive
environmental design, that this book makes its unique contribution. Jellicoe was interested in a different type of overlay, which he
described as transparencies(#Harvey) .
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Garden design
For the four centuries after 1000 AD, gardens were predominantly the work of monks, nuns and high-born ladies (except in the
South of Spain). Gardeners kept few records and seem to have been uninterested gardens as a works of art. It was an Age of Faith.
From 1400 to 1700 renaissance ideals, traceable to Platos Theory of Forms, resulted in what are customarily described as formal
gardens. Since all gardens have form, the term formal makes sense only in relation to Platos conceptual theory. The enclosed
garden (hortus conclusus) nestled behind protective walls. Baroque gardens reached out and took advantage of the natural
landscape, long before Kent leaped his fence. Many formal gardens were great works of art. Between 1700 and 1800 the landscape
movement produced one unchallenged work of art, many great estates and a profusion of pathetic layouts. Stourhead ranks with the
Alhambra, the Villa dEste, the Villa Lante, Vaux and Chantilly. Other designers, guided by Repton after 1800, it must be said,
wasted their energy on eclectic re-creations in what Edward Kemp incisively named The Mixed Style. At best, the results were
sentimental. European colonization of the Americas permitted, and may have induced, a break with sentiment. In the work of Burle
Marx, Luis Barragan, Thomas Church and Dan Kiley we can savor the fresh spirit of abstract modernism. These men were artists,
though Church is included in this group mainly for his work on the Dewey-Donnell garden at Sonoma with Lawrence Halprin.
Design methods
Relationships between design philosophy, design achievement and the types of people attracted to outdoor design can be further
examined by considering design methods. They are reviewed chronologically but can be regarded as a set of postmodern
alternatives, amongst which we can exercise our tastes and preferences.
Craft Design
Craft evolution was the predominant design method during the Middle Ages. Men and women looked on the work of their ancestors
and considered what improvements might be effected. Mud huts evolved into brick dwellings. Flights of steps gained good
proportions and adequate foundations. The craft of making steel evolved out of iron-making. Horse-drawn carts became horseless
carriages and then automobiles.
Design-by-Drawing
From the Renaissance onwards there was a steady application of drawing and calculation to the design process. Designers with
clean hands and school knowledge showed design skil ls distinct from those of craftsmen. By 1950 the drawing board reigned
supreme and our new masters had university degrees. Craftspeople had become blue collar wage-slaves. This was the heyday of
mass production. Fordism ruled the worlds factories, building sites, horticultural nurseries and landscape design studios.
Post-Fordist Design
The Japanese dented Fordism with an approach to decision-making which is more consensual than hierarchical. Workers at each
stage in the production line became involved in the design process. Those who fitted door-handles suggested improvements to their
design and manufacture. More knowledge was brought into the design process. This effected great changes in the automotive
industry and much better cars. The construction industry is comparatively unaffected as yet. One lives in hope. The Egan Report
tends in this direction.
Computer-Aided-Design
Digital design methods(#Watson) will bring about change. But their use between 1980 and 2000 was disappointing andresembles the state of car design between 1880 and 1900 (when designers made motor vehicles resemble horse-drawn carriages).
The failings of the first CAD age were caused, in part, by the dominance of AutoCad. It began as a draughtsmans package and,
though more used by designers, retains this characteristic. Image-editing, solid-modeling, terrain-modeling and animation
programmes herald new opportunities. For pattern analysis, the most valuable computer programmes may be web-based
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Geographical Information Systems(#GIS) (GIS). They facilitate the complementation of design-by-drawing with design-by-
database. Analysis of patterns can be linked to the analysis of attributes, revealing new patterns and surprising opportunities. A
GIS can hold historical data, current data, ideas and future projections, helping designers to deal with the fourth and fifth
dimensions (Fig 6) .
Summary
The problems with post-1800 landscape design may be summarised as follows:
The classical design axiom ran aground (c 1800) when imitating nature came to mean no more than the design of gardens along
the lines of empirically interpreted natural forms. Art became artifact. Nature became irregularity. Gardens became concrete.
Without idealism, garden and landscape design lost their appeal to artists and craftsmen of the first rank. This is a sociological
point.
When landscape theory began to revive, at the end of the nineteenth century, it attracted reformers (eg Geddes) concerned with
social functions and ecological processes. This separated landscape planning and design from the fine arts.
After 1945, landscape designers allied themselves, ruinously, with the functional aspect of dogmatized architectural modernism.
Trying to make form follow function they were blocked by a poor appreciation of landscape functions.
Design-by-Drawing, like the Survey-Analysis-Design method itself, encouraged designers to view landscapes in two dimensions and
from too few standpoints.
During the twentieth century, the social, ecological, political, literary and artistic concerns of landscape design remained in
separate compartments. Planting became known as landscaping. Designers lost their integrative role with regard to the five key
elements of outdoor design: Landform, Habitat, Building, Paving, Water.
The public, our clients, have been without professional designers able to create places which look good, meet social demands and
have desirable ecological characteristics.
How can we resolve these problems? By looking to our history, drawing more knowledge into the design process and utilizing
pattern analysis and hyperlinking as design tools. This approach can be described as the design of HyperLandscapes.
Go to article on HyperLandscapes
(/history_theory/garden_landscape_design_articles/design_methods/hyper_linked_landscape_design)
1. Turner, T. 'Pattern analysis' Landscape DesignNo 204 October 1991
2. The point is eloquently made by the cover photograph and introductory text of: Trancik, RogerFinding lost spaceNew York;
Wokingham : Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1986
3. Walker, P., Simo, M., Invisible gardens: the search for modernism in the American landscapeMIT Press 1994
4. It would be an onerous task to supply full references for this article but many of the ideas can be pursued through hyperlinks
from the LIH Landscape Information Hub (at http://www.lih.gre.ac.uk)
5. Hunt, J.D Gardens and the Picturesque: Studies in the History of Landscape Architecture MIT Press 1992
6. There is a diagram of this idea at p. 91 Turner, T., Landscape planning and environmental impact design.7. Hunt, J.D Greater perfections: the practice of garden theoryThames & Hudson 2000
8. I have discussed these points at greater length in the first chapter of English garden design(1986), re-published at
www.gardenvisit.com, and in an essay on The blood of philosopher-kings, City as landscape(1996)
9. Geddes comment on parks is reproduced at www.lih.gre.ac.uk/plan/geddes.htm
10. This is my assessment of Geddes one might award top place to Howard, Unwin or Mumford. The assessment of McHarg
comes from a recent survey of American town planners.
11. Steinitz, C. et al Hand-drawn overlays: their history and prospective uses Landscape ArchitectureSeptember 1976 pp 444-
455
12. See www.lih.gre.ac.uk/compute/compute.htm
13. Mumford, L, Introduction to McHarg, I.L., Design with nature
14. Turner, T., Jellicoe and the subconscious
(http://www.gardenvisit.com/history_theory/garden_landscape_design_articles/designers/geoffrey_alan_jellicoe_subconscious)
In Harvey, S (ed) Geoffrey Jellicoe: a monographLandscape Design Trust, 1998 (text of Jellicoe and the subsconscious
also available at www.gardenvisit.com/t/gaj.htm )
15. Turner, T., Watson, D., Dead masterplans and digital creativity Paper delivered at the Greenwich 2000 Digital Creativity
Symposium, published in the conference proceedings and also on the LIH website at www.lih.gre.ac.uk/compute/digital.htm
http://www.gardenvisit.com/history_theory/garden_landscape_design_articles/designers/geoffrey_alan_jellicoe_subconscioushttp://www.gardenvisit.com/history_theory/garden_landscape_design_articles/design_methods/hyper_linked_landscape_design -
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16. There is an example of a GIS application to park planning in Public Open Space: planning and management with GIS
(Greenwich University Press, 1998) ISBN 1 86166 100 2
(/history_theory/garden_landscape_design_articles/design_methods/hyper_linked_landscape_design)
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(/assets/madge/cats2/600x/cats2_600x.jpg)
Fig 1 Plato believed the
primary geometrical forms
give shape give to the visible
world, and that knowledge of
the forms is necessary for a
good society.
(/assets/madge/three_stakes__/original/three_stakes___original.jpg)
Fig 2Three stakes
(Empiricism, Geography and
Functionalism) driven into
the heart of landscape
theory (p 144, Turner, T. City
as landscape)
(/assets/madge/waterloo_steps/original/waterloo_steps_original.jpg)
Fig 3 Waterloo Steps. The
start of John Nashs
picturesque route from St
Jamess Park to RegentsPark, in London.
(/assets/madge/geddes_thinking/original/geddes_thinking_original.jpg)
Fig 4 Patrick Geddes used
his Place-Work-Folk
diagram to show that
knowledge of these inter-
relationships s necessary for
the re-creation of city-
regions. (reproduced from p.
161 of Kitchen, P,A most
unsettling person(Golanz,London, 1975)
(/assets/madge/modgis2b/original/modgis2b_original.jpg)
Fig 5 GIS can help to
answer What? Where? and
What If? questions (p. 106
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Turner, T., Landscapeplanning and environmental
impact design).
(/assets/madge/modgis1b/original/modgis1b_original.jpg)
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Fig 6 GIS allows information
and ideas about the past,
the present and the future to
be inter-related. (p. 25
Turner, T., Landscape
planning and environmental
impact design).
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