Water-smart landscaping erasing carbon footprint to debut at Abu Dhabi event

As concerns continue to grow about the on the environment, UAE, organizers of Gulf Landscaping scheduled to take place at the National Exhibition Centre from 17th to 2008 announced that water smart technology and methods of offsetting carbon footprint will make their Middle East debut at the two-day event.

at the event will showcase water-smart through sensible best practices and display methods to improve the health of the immediate environment and reduce carbon footprint  Backyard Landscaping.

Spurred by the boom in the industry, projects in the region comprising commercial and residential landscaping design and maintenance are set to multiply twofold to top Dhs60bn by 2010.

The event will provide landscaping ideas as well as products for erosion control, , landscape maintenance, , fertilizers, tips and facts on the latest trends for some fresh ideas, but also for professionals who are looking for some inspiration and outdoor design ideas.

in the is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high .

‘With the advent of international players,Backyard regional designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than , soil and water,’ said John Wigham, Director of Cracknell - clear market leaders in the architecture business.

Mr. Wigham noted that the is beginning to value the outdoors and professionals are now in big demand. ‘Driven by the , many have increasingly turned to services to design, develop and maintain their investments while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,’ he said.

Gulf is an for the booming Middle East outdoor design and architecture industries. The event is designed to generate for companies in the business.

The event will be co-located with Working Buildings Middle East and Fit-Out Middle East to enable those involved in the development and delivery of this major growth industry to meet their and outdoor architecture needs in one visit.

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Saturday, August 30th, 2008

??Gcc Landscaping Business Set To Double To Aed 60 Billion By 2010??

Spurred by the boom in the industry, landscaping projects in the region comprising commercial and residential design and maintenance are set to double in volume to exceed AED 60 billion by 2010 according to UK’s , organizers of Gulf . The event is scheduled to take place at the National Exhibition Centre from 17th to 2008.

in the is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high . “With the advent of international players, regional landscape designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than , soil and water,” said , Chris Fountain.

Spurred by the boom in the industry, projects in the region comprising commercial and residential landscaping design and maintenance are set to double in volume to exceed AED 60 billion by 2010 according to UK’s , organizers of Gulf . The event is scheduled to take place at the National Centre from 17th to 2008.

in the is a competitive business fraught with high competition, shrinking profits and high . “With the of international players, regional designers and builders are realizing that there’s more to growth than sunshine, and water,” said , Chris Fountain.

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Mr. Fountain noted that the is beginning to value the outdoors and professionals are now in big demand. “Driven by the , many have increasingly turned to services to design, develop and maintain their investments while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,” he said.

Gulf is an for the booming Middle East outdoor design and architecture industries. The event is designed to generate for companies in the business.

The will serve as a sourcing platform and networking event for the regions landscape architects, developers, contractors and other key buyers, to enable them to select products, and solutions for the huge number of major developments in the commercial, retail, leisure and residential sectors, as well as city parks and highways.

The event will be co-located with Working Buildings Middle East and Fit-Out Middle East to enable those involved in the development and delivery of this major growth industry to meet their and outdoor architecture needs in one visit.

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Landscape Design Poised To Grow Rapidly In Uae

, June 2 (IANS) Driven by a , the market for landscape designing in the (UAE) is expected to grow to well over 60 billion (about $16 billion) in the next two years, WAM reported Monday. The commercial and residential designing projects in the Arab federation are set to exceed 60 billion by 2010, the quoted Britain’s , a leading landscaping firm, as saying.

“With the advent of international players in the sector, the local designers and builders realise that there’s more to growth than , soil and water,” , Chris Fountain, said.

He said the () is beginning to value the outdoors, and professionals are now in big demand.

“Many have turned to services to design, develop and maintain their investments, while landscaping contractors are learning how to grab their share of this high growth market,” he said.

will organise an exhibition Nov 17-18 on outdoor design and architecture in the Middle East. The event is being organised to generate for the designing companies.

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Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Before You Landscape Have A Plan

If you’re thinking about upping the of your house or redoing the for a big event, here are some landscaping ideas from Peggy . She’s a member of the of Landscape Designers and owner of Heart’s Ease and Garden Design in the Toano area of James City County.

Show off the house. Make the front door the from the street. “Frame” the house with the — don’t obscure it.

Do it stylishly. Consider the architecture and of the house — formal, cottage, contemporary, etc. — when selecting plants to create a “style” appropriate to the setting.

Think about color. Select and flowers that echo the paint or on the house. Fill large containers on the porch or steps with that repeat the front door color for a designer look.

Big is best. Create wide, sweeping, curved bed lines in proportion to the size and scale of the house. Bigger is usually better.

Space properly. Plant shrubs at least 3 to 4 feet away from the foundation of the house and allow enough room between for them to reach their . Read carefully! Don’t overplant — will grow!

Stagger sizes. Plant dwarf, slow-growing or low-growing under windows; use taller plantings at corners or along . Use pyramidal carefully as accents.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Garden Tours Provide Opportunity To See New Ideas

Meet with landscape designers at 10 private gardens and landscapes they designed and installed from to San Rafael, Terra Linda and Novato. These gorgeous, well-established gardens may feature a , pond, waterfall or beehive.

Whether your garden has shaded or sunny areas you will get great ideas for successful . are diverse, but all are pesticide-free.

Gardens may feature a creek with stabilization project, steep terraced hillsides with oaks, redwood and fern bordered rock creeks, succulents and ornamental grasses, fruit trees, lawns, and medicinal plants or flat . Some are Asian or English garden-influenced with a California twist. See ways to better use rain and irrigation water on your property.

Learn how the right and planting can reduce fire danger around your home. Garden includes natives and other Mediterranean summer- .

Discounts to visitors are offered on landscaping services. Refreshments provided and free and other are available at each site to answer questions.

Marin’s Eco-Friendly Garden Tour Sat., May 17 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Featured designers include PlannedLand, Jeannine White; Edger Landscape Design; EcoScapes, Leslie Patton; Quinn’s ; Blume &; Dean ; Equinox ; California ; EcoLogic , Leith Carstarphen; Reilly Designs and Art Gardens Company.

Registration required, directions provided at time of registration: Call Gina Purin of MCSTOPPP at 499-3202. Cost: $15 per adult.

Support Community Gardens with City Council

The cost of fresh fruit and vegetables is going through the roof. Many children have lost their connection to the earth and its seasons. Seniors have become increasingly isolated. People from all have little or no access to garden space, whether apartment renters or folks who own condos, townhomes or McMansions. Community gardens bring people together, provide opportunities for socialization and education on healthy gardening and eating.

Please contact the Novato City Council and let them know you support community gardens. The Garden Committee has identified two good potential locations. Novato covers a large geographic area and one garden would be a great start, whichever location they choose.

For little cost to the city, it will bring great benefit to Novato residents. Individuals including seniors and families with children will be able to experience the pleasure of gardening, the health benefits of garden exercise and fresh, pesticide-free food.

The Novato Community Garden Committee has been working with the city and other groups to find a permanent location. They received grant funding through the Kaiser Foundation and Supervisor Judy Arnold that will help the gardens get off the ground. Ongoing funding for insurance and water management will be provided by nominal annual garden plot rental fees.

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Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Mproving The Landscaping Can Add Value To Your House

A few years ago, when Alicia Morgan-Cooper and her husband Fred decided they needed more space for their growing family, several items on their house-hunting list were non-negotiable.

“We wanted plenty of trees and , a large backyard for the kids, and it had to have a garden,” says Morgan-Cooper, a pediatrician and mother of two, with a baby on the way. “I’m an avid gardener, and my garden is my sanctuary.”

Landscaping Services In spring 2005, the couple moved into their dream home, a six-bedroom colonial situated on half an acre in the city’s Guilford neighborhood. Soon after, they launched a series of home improvements, starting with the .

“We totally revamped the ,” says Morgan-Cooper, who worked with a professional landscape architect, Plant Genie in Towson, as well as a landscaping contractor.

They planted nine flowering pear, crabapple and other trees, had two flagstone patios built off the kitchen and sunroom, complete with a walkway, and filled the flower beds with colorful azaleas, daylilies, rosebushes and much more.

“At first, there was a lot of mud,” says Morgan-Cooper, who said the overhaul was motivated in part by property damage due to past flooding. “But now we love it Landscaping Services. I’m not ever leaving.”

All said, the project cost about $90,000 — money the couple says was well spent. After purchasing their home for $750,000, they say it’s now valued at more than $1 million.

While professional was once viewed as a luxury, more homeowners are beginning to recognize that planting a perennial garden, installing a pond or building an arbor, may have more than only aesthetic value. Many experts say — which runs the gamut from so-called softscaping (such as turf maintenance and planting) to hardscape installation of patios and — can increase the value of one’s home, and in a tight housing market, help attract potential buyers.

“Studies have shown that can increase the value of your home by 15 percent,” says Vanessa Finney, executive director of the Maryland Nursery and Association Inc., an industry trade group whose members include nurseries, garden centers, landscapers, arborists and suppliers.

“It’s about ,” says Brent Flickinger, a Realtor with City Life Realty in Baltimore, referring to that intangible factor that makes a prospective buyer want to look beyond the “For Sale” sign. “Years ago, people were fighting over houses. Now, houses are sitting longer, and the longer they sit, the less desirable they seem to people,” he adds. “ helps your house stand out. It can help the real estate agent get showings, get people inside the house. If they don’t get in the door, it doesn’t matter.”

James McWilliams, a co-owner of Maxalea Inc., a contractor in North Baltimore, says he often fields calls from homeowners desiring to spruce up their houses before putting them on the market. “They may need to clear plants that are overgrown near the house, or edge and delineate the flower beds. Sometimes we are checking for insects or diseased trees. We address all sorts of things.”

Three generations of his family have worked in the horticultural business since the 1920s, and today, Maxalea employs some 80 horticulturalists, architects, designers, groundskeepers, nurserymen and others.

McWilliams says their clients typically spend between $5,000 to $50,000, but it’s not unheard of, he adds, for higher-end clients to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars their mansions and estates.

“When you spend that much on a home, you don’t want 20 random ,” he says. “You need a plan, Landscaping Services and a professional who can help you design a layout that will be beautiful.”

To that end, his team members will schedule consultations with homeowners to discuss everything from “form and function” to , materials, color schemes and whatever signature look the homeowner is seeking. They then sketch out a plan and draw up a budget.

McWilliams, who says he favors a “clean” style with crisp edges, minimal mulch and repetitious grouping of , also keeps pace with the latest trends. For instance, he’s noticing a move away from wooden , toward more fieldstone and Formstone patios. Another hot trend is the and living area. “People are entertaining and extending it outside,” he says.

Indeed, when Lauren Quattro and partner Marichi Capino want to entertain at the home they share in the Mayfield community near Lake Montebello, they simply walk out back to a yard that’s been transformed by .

“This is the house that I grew up in,” says Quattro, a nurse who returned to her childhood home in the early 1990s after her mother died. “I’m pretty sure my parents would not recognize it now,” she says with a chuckle.

Indeed, the once-modest brick rowhouse has been gutted and renovated inside and out, fashioned into a loft-style space, complete with a renovated kitchen. The backyard has been professionally landscaped, and boasts a pond with koi, a deck and a hot tub. Capino, a native of the Philippines who was a physician in her homeland, has planted a container garden with pansies, tulips and other colorful flowers, and looks forward to the wisteria expected to bloom later this season. “It relaxes me,” she says.

While many properties in this section of Northeast Baltimore are listed in the high $200s, Quattro says she would not sell it for less than $400,000. “It’s a great house in a great neighborhood, and worth every penny,” she says.

According to a survey performed by the USDA-Maryland Agricultural Statistics Service and underwritten by MNLA, installation and maintenance pumped $234.7 million into the state’s economy in 2003, the most recent year for which figures are available.

While professional is clearly big business, Jim McElroy, president of Green Fields Nursery &; Co. in North Baltimore, emphasizes that it doesn’t have to cost a bundle. “I want people to know is not just for the rich,” says McElroy. For every person who comes in wanting, say, lighting, a stone or , just as many simply want terra cotta pots with nice .

“You can take $500 or even $50 and do basic things … mulching the beds and adding pretty flowers that will catch people’s eye,” says McElroy, who also gives advice on a weekly radio show. “The key is that the home should look well-maintained. A picture is worth a thousand words.”

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Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

City Landscape Things You Need To Remember

The city landscape business underwent some serious changes in the past few years. With great developments in technology and the construction of skyscrapers in cities around the country, the idea of city has taken yet another dimension. Since the demand for a more environmentally friendly atmosphere had gone up over the years, many buildings all over the country now have their own indoor gardens that need landscaping. Many of these indoor gardens are so huge that they take up about several square meters.

Irrigation Systems

One of the biggest challenges to people who are into the city business is how to set up efficient system for indoor gardens.  Note that an inefficient system can cost hundreds of dollars of loss to the owner of the building. Moreover, bad system can cause flooding around the indoor garden. Runoffs from the indoor garden could also negatively affect of the tenants of the building.

This situation is not really acceptable to building owners and tenants, thus, people who are into the city business have to find ways to prevent these kinds of incidents. Fortunately, there are many available technologies that can help solve problems of indoor gardens. Most of these systems are already run by computers; thus it is often easy to control the flow of the water into the indoor garden. However, there are times when things simply don’t work as they should, so it is important that the system of the indoor gardens should have its own emergency features.

The Right Plants

Since many of these indoor gardens are huge and they are usually located in the top floors of the building, it’s a big challenge to and maintain them. Note that the climate in these tall buildings is often inhospitable to . Choosing the right type of for an indoor garden of a plush skyscraper therefore can be quite daunting.

Choosing the right types of for a huge indoor garden on the 50th floor of a building requires more research and imagination on the part of the city designer. Since most type of do not really grow at high altitudes, city designers have to make several adjustments. Setting up a controlled environment for the is often the solution to this kind of problem. Controlling the climate on the indoor garden is very important to help the thrive.

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Friday, January 11th, 2008

Ellerslie Flower Show in full bloom again

Auckland’s Ellerslie International Flower Show is once again in full bloom, offering an extravaganza of colour, style and elegant outdoor living.

Judges name the best of the best

The biggest show of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere, up to 75,000 people are expected to tour the show over the coming days, pumping more than $14 million into the Auckland economy.

Held at the Auckland Botanic Gardens, the show offers about 30 outdoor gardens, a host of indoor exhibitions, expert speakers and retail stalls.

worked night and day for two weeks to create their designer gardens on the 5.5-hectare site.

But for two emerging landscape designers, their dream of showcasing their talent turned into a nightmare that just would not stop.

Unitec students Rianne Stevens and Benjamin Ragland were just about to start constructing their “Retro Revival” pinball garden off-site when their tools were stolen.

They begged and borrowed replacement equipment from friends and family - but then Benjamin’s car was repossessed.

The car’s previous owner had sold the car to Benjamin while still owing thousands of dollars to the finance company, then skipped the country.

Despite the setbacks, the pair completed their apartment patio garden just minutes before the judging deadline on Monday night.

But their nightmare was not over.

Racing out to the show grounds on Monday morning for the announcement of the award winners, the pair got stuck in a traffic jam on the motorway and missed their moment - they won gold for best emerging talent.

The overall supreme award went to Palmco, for its simple but stunning jungle of green fronds, which was intersected by a wooden walkway that led to a canopied hideaway with a leaf-shaped lounger.

Designer Adam Shuter said he had worked 14-hour days for the past two weeks transporting the full-sized palm trees from the company’s Kerikeri base and replanting them on site to create the tranquil haven.

Palmco also won the supreme award for construction.

Other supreme sections winners were Auckland Orchid, for best horticultural, and Sentiments Flowers’ “Tornadao”, for design excellence.

The Ellerslie Flower Show opens to the public this morning.

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Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

The Gradient Of The Hillside Landscaping

Here are some hillside <a href=landscaping ideas and tips.” align=”right” border=”5″ height=”100″ hspace=”5″ vspace=”5″ width=”150″ />The gradient of the hillside matters a lot in it. Gradient determines how much you can feasibly modify, Hillside if you’re working on it solely in a personal capacity.

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Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

The Garden Landscaping Designers Darling

Until this century Garden Landscaping, euphorbias had no place in ordinary gardens.euphorbias and their odd flowers have become darlings of celebrity florists and designers, Garden and new hybrids developed for gardens are readily offered Garden Landscaping . (more…)

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Sunday, November 11th, 2007