Arboretum style landscaping key to two suburban developments

Lush landscaping and other amenities are considered vital to the success of both an 86-acre lifestyle shopping center and a 50-acre corporate business park in the suburbs.

On one site, The Arboretum of South Barrington, the developer said it is spending twice as much on landscaping as most similar centers, although no dollar amount was given.

“It very unusual to have this many species and plants going in any commercial project,” said Lee Richardson, a landscape architect based in Atlanta. Lee Richardson and Associates primarily designs landscaping for lifestyle centers, mixed-use developments and corporate campuses across the country.

“We are surrounded by some of the most expensive homes in Chicagoland,” he said. “It’s only appropriate that our landscaping be lush and special. We are committed to honor the history of the nursery that operated here for many years by an unsurpassed landscape plan that would be the talk of the suburbs.”

“The landscaping will really make the place stand out, with counts and mixes that are designed to give interest throughout the year. We are also trying to incorporate The Arboretum’s nursery history in the design of the entire site.”

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Friday, June 20th, 2008

Edgeworth Garden Shows A European Flair

After growing up among steel mills near Dusseldorf, Germany, Juergen Mross felt very much at home when he moved to Pittsburgh in the 1970s. But he wasn’t as comfortable in the 1950s red-brick Colonial he and his wife, Renate, bought in Edgeworth in 1986. It was large enough for the couple and their four sons, but it had a small entrance and lacked character.

With the help of Gretchen Barlett of Barlett Design, the couple added a foyer and portico with six massive columns in front. Then, in 2006 and 2007, they had landscape architect Ed Werley of Werley Associates and landscape contractor Eichenlaub transform the grounds around the house. Now Mr. Mross feels at home.

Although the house separates the front and back areas, the garden is unified by repetition and contrast, both of naturally mounding plants like azalea, spirea and itea and of curving formal hedges of sheared hornbeams and boxwood. The rows of tall hornbeams, in particular, give the front landscape a formal, European feel. Recently, Hilbish McGee Lighting Design added low-voltage lighting that highlights the hornbeams, facade and other features at night.

In the front and back, large uplights catch the huge old maples and pine trees that form the backdrop for the new landscaping and, in one sense, inspired it. After large limbs nearly struck the house during a storm, Mr. Mross decided it was time for a big change, starting with the elevations. Mr. Werley, who works with his son, John, said the front yard was raised 3 feet and a series of sandstone walls installed around a central curving staircase of carved limestone slabs.

Brick pavers were added near the street to create a dropoff area and are repeated in the walkways and a landing. There, a sculpture of upright logs cast in bronze by artist Peter Calaboyias is the center of a fountain. Originally on the side of the house, it was moved “for greater visual impact,” Mr. Werley said. At night, the hornbeams also pack a visual punch, each with its own uplight.

“There’s a lot going on there, but it’s not bright. It’s subtle,” said Halbane Hilbish, principal owner of Hilbish McGee and a member of the International Association of Lighting Designers.

In the back, Mr. Hilbish subtly lit Japanese maples, weeping Camperdown elms and low sandstone walls topped by loose hedges of yew and blue holly and rows of spirea and cranberry bush viburnum. Three weeping cherries and other specimen trees were salvaged from an earlier redesign and reused.

Other older elements play parts in the new design. A new arched gate leads to “the treehouse,” where the four Mross boys held countless sleepovers. They’re now ages 30, 27, 25 and 18. The new curving stone walls bracket a new cedar garden house built by Vixen Hill, and new sheared boxwood hedges line the new conservatory. More ‘Winter Gem’ boxwood and a bay window frame a Japanese Stewartia that has been limbed up slightly to enhance the view of the garden. Around its base are Yak rhododendrons, fothergilla and ‘Goldflame’ spirea.

“The spirea has flowers and nice fall color — a yellowish red,” said Ryan Johnson, project administrator for Eichenlaub.

He said the hardest part of this project was access — a road had to be cut from front to back — and finding space to stockpile plants and materials. When it was finished, it won an Award for Landscape Excellence from the Pennsylvania Landscape and Nursery Association.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

Alderman Donates Park Arch

The Canal Port Park has become the perfect stop for those looking to take in nature and history while walking along the I&M Canal — much of which is thanks to Alderman Ken Sereno and his wife Joan.

About two weeks ago a new addition was added to the park on Illinois Avenue. A steel arch was put up over the stone entryway to the replica canal boat the Heritage.

The Serenos had it made by Crown Concepts Corporation, a metal and welding shop. Because Sereno is a repeat customer and Crown Concepts is part of the community, the company cut Sereno a break on the cost, he said. The Serenos purchased it for about $4,500.

The arch features cut outs of squirrels, birds and other animal and plant life that is natural to the area. The top of the arch has a cut out that states “Canalport Park.”

“I spent 48 years working and didn’t donate much then so I thought it’s time to give back to the community,” Sereno said.

The Serenos are doing more than enough to make up for lost time. Just last November they had a steel sculpture of a horse pulling a buckboard full of barrels made and put in the park. It represents what would have been seen along the canal 100 years ago. It cost the Serenos about $5,300 and was also made by Crown Concepts.

In addition Sereno helped with the cost of the mural near the park on the Cal’s printing building at 123 Illinois Ave.

“It’s coming along beautifully down there with the butterfly garden, stone (entry) and the things from Ken and Joan,” said Mayor Dick Kopczick during the June 2 Morris City Council meeting.

Several other community members have also donated to the park including City Engineer Warren Olson, who designed a butterfly garden in memory of his wife Karen Olson. The park was dedicated September 30, 2006.

The Tom Delockery family also donated the garden between the bank wall (put in by the city) and the landscaping stone (donated by Olson) against Calhoun Street.

Sereno said the park holds the memories of the city’s history and he hopes visitors take time to think of Morris’ past while enjoying the park.

Although most would say he has done more than his share of donating, Sereno said he isn’t quite sure he’s done yet.

“The more we have here the more people will come down and look at the mural and the boat,” Sereno said.

Sereno said he is working on a project for Jim and Carol Baum’s new Canal Port Community Center. The Baums recently purchased the old Coleman Hardware Company building on the west end of Illinois Avenue. They plan to remodel the building and divide it into condominiums for the area’s non-profit organizations.

The building’s old concrete chimney sits on the side of the building right now. Sereno said he’d like to incorporate it into a flag stand for the building. The original part of the building is about 135 years old so the chimney is historic, Sereno said, and should be preserved.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

Ideas Sought To Protect The Broads

Families and business leaders could hold the key to protecting the environment on the Norfolk Broads - and officials are seeking new ideas which could be backed up with a share of a ï¿¡200,000 grant.

The Broads Authority has today called on local people, companies and organisations to come forward with solutions which could help protect wildlife and reduce the carbon footprints of the tens of thousands of tourists who visit the Broads every year.

Each year since 2002 the government has provided ï¿¡200,000 to each of the UK’s National Parks to inspire communities to come up with bright ideas which will benefit the area.

The Broads Authority has used the money to form a sustainability fund, helping promote sustainable tourism, with green business, boating, biking and canoeing projects, education programmes and projects to help disadvantaged people.

Funding has also now been given for a study and carbon audit of the Broads to be carried out by the Cred carbon reduction programme, based at the University of East Anglia.

The study will provide a picture of where carbon emissions come from and how much is produced, so the Broads Authority can draw up a carbon reduction plan to comply with government targets.

In the past the cash has helped launch the Broads Society’s Go Electric! campaign which gave grants for eight private boat engine conversions from diesel to electric.

Subsidies have also been given to help fund the only Green Boat Show in the UK, held on Salhouse Broad in September last year.

The Hewett School in Norwich has also been given an ï¿¡8,000 grant to pilot a project, landscaping the grounds and building allotments, an amphitheatre and a wildlife garden.

A spokeswoman for the Broads Authority said: “The projects we fund are wide-ranging but have several things in common. They are all innovative, sustainable, and improve the life of people living in and working in the area. The Broads Authority is keen to help young people and support projects which do not qualify for other public funding. No project is too large or too small.”

Some of the organisations which have benefited from funding in the past include the Norfolk Schools Sailing Association which was awarded a ï¿¡15,200 grant to buy five new Wayfarer dinghies to help introduce schoolchildren to sailing.

The boats will replace 20 year old boats which were beyond repair.

David Wrenn, commodore of the association, said: “The help and support we have been given from the Broads Authority is brilliant. It is fantastic that they are helping projects like ours that bring a benefit to the community.

“Everyone who works here is a volunteer and gives their time for free so having the grant and being able to upgrade the boats has been a big boost for us.”

A leaflet, Bright ideas wanted, explains who and what qualifies for funding. It is available from the Broads Authority office at 18 Colegate, Norwich and at information centres.

The project follows the launch of the Broads Tourism Forum 2008 A Day in the Broads campaign with Visit Norwich, supported with funding from the Broads Authority’s sustainable development fund.

The focus of the campaign this year is to encourage green tourism with prominence being given to activities such as cycling, walking and nature spotting.

In December last year, the Evening News revealed how The Broads Authority had been awarded an extra ï¿¡1.3m of government funding over three years to be spent on important conservation projects.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Northern Water Promotes Landscape Education

Surrounded by flowers and with a breathtaking view of Longs Peak, members of the community not only get to take in a beautiful landscape at Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District’s Conservation Garden; they also get to learn about water.

“Water conservation in our region is essential,” said Jill Boyd, communications specialist for Northern Water. “Visiting our gardens gives homeowners a very practical idea of what they can do to conserve water. Beyond the education component, it is very beautiful out there.”

Located behind the district at 220 Water Ave. in Berthoud, the 2.5-acre garden — which Northern Water employees nicknamed “the backyard” — is broken into sectors to educate residents on landscaping and the best way to maintain yards with minimal water use.

Walking through the garden, visitors have the opportunity to learn about different types of grass and what works well in the Colorado environment, irrigation and sprinkler technologies, soil revitalization, the conservation’s weather station and new types of gardening tools.

A portion of the garden also is devoted to Xeriscaping, or landscaping that uses a minimal amount of water. This area is broken into eight miniature units that show examples of how yards can be landscaped.

“The backyard helps to combat the notion that landscaping that doesn’t use a lot of water is not attractive,” Boyd said. “You can see that you can use less water and still have a very eye-catching landscape.”

Northern Water maintains at least 250 species of plant life in its backyard area each year.

“Every year, we try to add about 67 plants,” said Ron Boyd, landscape water management and conservation specialist for Northern Water. “The garden is designed so it can be changed out.”

Also included in the tour of the area is an interpretive section featuring various ponds that represent Northern Water’s reservoirs. In two agricultural areas, irrigation technology and alfalfa species are tested.

The garden is open 24 hours a day, year-round. During the summer months, tours are available upon request from 2 to 4 p.m., and tours for larger groups can be arranged.

Community members who want to stroll through the garden on their own can bring a cell phone. By dialing numbers posted around the garden, they can listen to free descriptions of the processes and research taking place.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

June Landscaping Tips Butterflies And Gardens Special To The Online Edition

Celebrate summer by welcoming butterflies into your garden. Butterfly gardens are different from many other “theme” gardens. To be successful, the garden not only needs to have a pleasing design that works with the surrounding home and landscape, but it needs to perform a very specific task. Attracting butterflies may seem fairly straightforward, but you cannot assume all butterflies are attracted to all flowers.

Butterflies are beautiful, somewhat ethereal creatures whose colorful wings and graceful flight patterns add a sense of wonder to any garden planting

Butterflies have plant preferences: There are literally thousands of species of butterflies, and each species tends to have a distinct group of plants as preferred food source. When selecting plants for a butterfly garden, it is also important to remember that a butterfly goes through four life cycles, with one set of food requirements for the larval stage and another type of food once the butterfly emerges from the chrysalis.

The nectar sources for butterflies include annuals, perennials, wildflowers, herbs, shrubs and trees. Annuals and tender perennials known to attract many species of butterfly include zinnias, white alyssum, marigolds, lantana, cosmos, nicotiana, petunias, ageratum, fuchsia, snapdragons and sunflowers. Herbs and wildflowers that attract butterflies include chives and other alliums, bee balm, spearmint, Anaphalis, Lunaria, Verbena, dandelions, clover, Queen Anne’s Lace, butterfly weed, goldenrod and thistle.

Perennials for butterfly gardens include daisies, Phlox, Aster, Liatris, Rudbeckia, Echinacea, Eupatorium, Achillea, Aubretia, Helenium, Echinops, Limonium, Sedum, Phystostegia, Scabiosa, Coreopsis, Hemerocallis, Heuchera, Lilium, Lythrum, Lavandula, Myosotis and Penstemon. Shrubs, vines and trees for butterfly gardens include Abelia, Aesculus, Aruncus, Buddleia, Clethra, Crataegus, Lindera, Lonicera, Malus, Prunus, Ribes, Salix, Spirea, Syringa, Vaccinium and Wisteria.

Design help: If a butterfly garden is to be created as part of an older, established landscape, look for a site that offers shelter—an overgrown fence, a clump of trees, the base of a sloping lot, or a rocky outcropping with a flat, grassy spot nearby. Water features and several hours of sun would complete the picture—minus only the butterfly-attracting plants.

Call it serendipity, but the preferred style of planting for design purposes—starting with low edging plants and gradually working up, level by level, to the tallest plants—is also one of the best arrangements for a butterfly garden. This is not only because it makes it easier for the butterflies to identify their favorite nectar-producing plants when they are clearly visible, but the taller plants offer shelter from both wind and predators.

The popular concept of a mixed border, combining annuals, perennials, herbs, roses, shrubs, vines and ornamental trees, all underplanted with bulbs, will provide a long bloom season as well as a variety of food sources and forms of shelter that will attract a large assortment of butterflies over a long period.

Other design guidelines: Although some theme gardens need meticulous care and a neat, sometimes formal appearance to create the intended ambience, butterflies like their surroundings to be a little messy. Rocky paths muddied by a sprinkler or parts of the garden where water pools on flat rocks will attract many species of butterfly like a luxury spa attracts movie stars. Research indicates that minerals released through the water’s evaporation process, primarily sodium, may play a vital part in the mating habits of butterflies. For this reason, some experts recommend putting small salt licks in a butterfly garden.

Areas in or around the garden where grass is allowed to grow long can act as a shelter and, for some species, a place to lay their eggs. If you can live with a section of your garden that is somewhat overgrown with grass, wildflowers, trees and shrubs, you will probably find more butterflies in this little wilderness than among carefully tended flower beds

Like plants, there are woodland butterfly species and those that prefer a sunny spot. Even sun-loving butterflies will appreciate the presence of a shaded shelter.

Butterflies have a powerful sense of smell. Much like dogs, the scents that they find attractive aren’t always scents the human population likes to encourage. Rotting fruits and vegetables are gourmet treats for some butterflies, while others are drawn to the more pleasant aromas of clover or wild violets.

Pesticides and herbicides should be avoided, whenever possible, because in almost every stage of life butterflies are extremely vulnerable to such toxins.

Some butterflies stay around for winter: Not many butterflies overwinter in the extreme climates of the Midwest, but those that do ( sometimes called “hibernators” ) will also benefit from winter shelter—mounds of ivy growing over old tree stumps, piles of logs or large, dead tree branches, a stack of old bricks or chunks of concrete.

Some butterflies will hibernate in old trees, while others will welcome the presence of specially designed “butterfly houses” as winter shelter. Winter or summer, butterflies need protection from the wind and a place where the sun will be reflected, somewhere safe from predators—including the trampling feet of children.

Types of butterflies: Monarch butterflies are usually a common sight in Illinois. Other likely candidates include Cabbage White butterflies, Clouded Sulphur, Orange Sulphur, Eastern-Tailed Blue, Meadow Fritillary, Pearl Crescent, Viceroy, Great Spangled Fritillary, Summer Azure, Question Mark, Least Skipper, European Skipper, and the Dion Skipper.

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Turning Inside Out Pool Landscaping

Experts say more and more locals head onto large patios and decks, into pools and onto intricately landscaped lawns.

Last summer, Christine and Joseph DeLeo added an in-ground pool to the yard of their Hollidaysburg home. It was an addition that they had wanted since moving into their home four years ago.

According to local experts, the DeLeos have hit two of the big three elements of outdoor spaces — pools, patios and decks and landscaping.

Pools are a key component of many outdoor spaces, says Bob Sutton, co-owner of Holiday Pools & Spas in Duncansville.

“(Some) people will do their whole yard over when they put in an in-ground pool — landscaping and a little shed or something to store things in,” he says. “Above-grounds are usually not as elaborate, but they’re still building a shed or doing some landscaping. The pool becomes the centerpiece of their backyard.”

‘‘What we do is kind of the backyard/outdoor room concept,’’ says Steve Martin, owner of Tussey Mountain Landscaping in Hollidaysburg. ‘‘That varies from small to grand.’’

Martin, who has been doing landscaping for 18 years, says he’s seen the business boom.

‘‘I think you’re seeing growth in it every year,’’ Martin says. ‘‘But in that last five years there seems to be more emphasis (on landscaping).’’

Tussey Mountain also does more traditional landscaping, with elaborate lighting, stone paths, concrete walkways and pads and plants and trees.

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Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Taconic Investment restores hope with Eastchester Heights

Sometimes, real estate development is about more than buying and selling properties Landscaping Rock. Taconic Investment Partners, for example, transforms neighborhoods.

Nowhere perhaps in the entire five boroughs is this better executed than in the North Bronx neighborhood of Baychester, where the Manhattan-based Taconic purchased a mammoth five-block, 114-building, 1,416-unit apartment complex, riddled with drugs and prostitution.

“It’s part of a focused strategy to buy properties that can turn around an entire area,” says Charles Bendit, a founder of Taconic, who also owns the full-block-size 111 Eighth Ave., between 15th and 16th Sts., and the Apple Store building in the Meatpacking District. “With large projects, you can create value by re-creating entire neighborhoods. Everyone benefits - the residents, us as owners as the asset appreciates in value, and the community.”

While this might sound like idealistic developer-speak or masquerade for profit-driven long-term planning, Taconic’s immediate impact through community outreach programs, apartment renovations and security upgrades has given new life and a new name - Eastchester Heights - to this Boston Road residential complex that locals once nicknamed “Homicide Homes.”

“When this housing complex sneezes, the entire area catches a cold,” says Harley Frank, Taconic’s residential asset manager, spearheading tenant-landlord relations and Eastchester’s makeover. “If each household spends $100 per week on nearby Boston Road, that’s $140,000 per week spent right in this neighborhood. That’s a lot of money.”

The history and architecture: This massive development is an architectural gem. Designed by Clarence Stein, one of America’s most famous architects of the 1930s, Eastchester Heights was built as a planned community for middle-income city residents. Stein Landscaping Rock, involved in the design of Sunnyside Gardens in Queens, studied planning and landscaping in England.

His work at Eastchester Heights, originally called Hillside Homes, complements the landscaping with large interior spaces across a series of four- and six-story brick buildings that rise with the hilly landscape. The streets act as terraces. Plush interior courtyards that look more like meadows harmoniously coexist with dark red-brick buildings accented by arched passageways and sidewalks serving as paths.

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Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Cactus Country At Beezley Hills Preserve

The Hedgehog Cactus on the nature trail north of Quincy will get your attention, if it doesn’t get your toes. The smallish cacti are less than a foot in height and easy to miss on the three-mile path. One false step in a pair of tennis shoes could easily ruin your day.

The hilly, shrub-steppe landscape on Beezley Hills has more to see than cacti. Known for its wildflowers, the short, pleasant hike through a quiet nature preserve offers wide views of the Columbia Basin.

With three inches of snow forecast for Stevens Pass over the weekend, last Thursday’s trip to Beezley Hills was part of the waiting game to get into the high country. There’s still too much snow in the mountains to get deep into the mountains without crampons or snowshoes. The trip came about a month too late, however. Most of the flowers, including the smallish cacti, had already bloomed and blossomed. Most of the sulphur lupine and balsamroot have retired for the year, but there is still plenty of sweet-smelling sage, thymeleaf and rock buckwheat and fuchsia flowers to look at.

The trail itself is an old double-track jeep road. It’s barely distinguishable in places, but impossible to get lost since you can see for miles and miles. It starts at a 2,900-foot elevation and heads down a ridge before petering out about halfway down the hillside. There’s no boundary sign or fence at the bottom, so you could conceivably walk into downtown Quincy, seven miles to the southwest.

Hiking boots would have come in handy. The ground is covered in prickly foliage and basalt rocks.

For someone accustomed to hiking in the forest, Beezley Hills is a dramatic change of pace. It’s a little intimidating being in such a vast area. Good thing it was a cool day on Thursday because there isn’t a tree — or water — for miles.

The area is protected and owned by the Nature Conservancy. The upper path is blocked from the access road by a fence with an opening at the trailhead near a communications tower.

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Monday, June 9th, 2008

Ann Arbor Residents Share Creative Landscaping In Annual Tour

landscaping.jpg”>Homeowners’ artistic expressions are the focus of next Saturday’s Ann Arbor Garden Walk.

From a display titled “A Country French Garden” (at 435 Stein Road) to one dubbed “Geometry in Bloom” (at 2230 Platt Road), the outdoor spaces on the 18th annual tour offer visitors a peek at some glorious landscapes.

“We feel that this year’s gardens offer an exceptional taste of the arts - not only music, but sculptures, artisan fountains, hand-done glass and mosaics, and distinctive plantings,” says Kathy Clark, chairwoman of the walk.
If you go

A perfect example is the garden of Lucie and Larry Nisson (1227 Lutz), called “Falling Waters.”

“I’m an artist,” says Larry Nisson, “and I create art with rocks and wood and some glass.”

He says his challenge is to create art “with dynamic tension, so it looks like it’s almost ready to fall over, but not.” He says he hopes people will view the art in his garden and “experience that tension.”

The water feature in the center is almost as lovely as the homeowner’s collection of orchids - about 120 in all, though not all of them will be on display.

At 809 Brooks St., Middy Potter has created “A Place to Dream” for visitors of all ages. It includes a stone tower that Potter built, 300 varieties of hosta and a vast collection of dwarf conifers. This garden also includes some wonderful sculptures.
Lisa Allmendinger | The Ann Arbor NewsMiddy Potter’s garden on Brooks Street in Ann Arbor, titled “A Place to Dream,” includes a stone tower, a vast collection of conifers and 300 varieties of hosta.
“The gardens on this year’s garden walk demonstrate the homeowners’ vision in creating an artistic expression of their lives and their work,” says Clark.

Tickets are $12, and proceeds will benefit the new education center at Growing Hope. There are plans to build a greenhouse and demonstration garden, which will provide hands-on training and education for low-income families and at-risk students, says Claudia Scioly, a member of the garden walk committee.

New to the tour this year will be entertainment at several of the gardens, Clark says.
The Stout Hearted String Band will play at the first garden (435 Stein Road) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nora Karsch, who plays the hammered dulcimer, is a member of Women’s Farm and Garden Association, which sponsors the annual garden walk.

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Monday, June 9th, 2008