Acid-Staining, Landscaping Give Homes Wow Factor

visiting the Gallery of Homes in Canutillo last weekend, I was impressed with the imaginative outdoor treatments. The curb appeal of these homes was striking. Desert landscaping was used in the front of the homes with added concrete designs. (more…)

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Saturday, August 16th, 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

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

Get Your Landscaping Off The Ground

So the pool is finally installed, and for all intents and purposes it’s swimming time. But that’s not to say your pool project is done: far from it, in fact. Just plopping a concrete box in the ground and filling it with water is hardly a noteworthy swimming pool design. If you don’t mind jeers and scorns from your upper-crust neighbors, feel free to enjoy the cool water and call it good. If you want your pool to look as good as it feels, however, your job isn’t finished.

There are many things to consider when planning your pool’s landscaping. How much room do you have to work with?

Are you considering an allinclusive design that dominates your entire back yard, or are you just thinking of a patio or deck around the pool itself? For an above-ground pool, a deck may be your quickest and least-costly option. If you have an inground pool that already has a scarred concrete patio, however, finishing the project is going to require a little bit more in-the-dirt work.

There are literally hundreds of elements that you could incorporate into a landscaping design. You’ll want to start your design out with the basics, however. Work from the inside out by deciding how you want your walkways to lay out. Is there simply going to be one that leads from your backdoor to the pool, or are you planning on having some more scenic detours?

Multiple walkways could lead one to the pool and another to a scenic area with a rock garden, some shrubs, a flower garden, a natural landscape and a gazebo. The options are literally limitless.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Wilton Landscaping Company Wins Design Award

The Connecticut Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects has awarded a Connecticut Design Award to Dickson DeMarche Landscape Architects/The LaurelRock Company at 969 Danbury Road.

The chapter gives the Connecticut Design Awards each year to recognize excellence in landscape architectural design, planning and analysis, communication and research.

Dickson DeMarche Landscape Architects/The LaurelRock Company won a merit award for their work on a beachfront retreat in Westport, an entry in the built works/residential category.

The owners of a beachfront home in Westport purchased an adjacent house to create a compound for themselves and their grown children. The design challenges were significant: The owners wanted to make the second house subordinate to the main house; attractively include a tennis court in the front yard; increase privacy from the seasonally busy street; preserve specimen plants; and provide additional protection from nor’easter storms, according to a release.

The new tennis court was positioned close to the second house to emphasize that building’s ancillary role. A lattice fence was used as the tennis court enclosure, employing a garden to diminish the impact of the large void within. The two homes were then joined by stone paths and walkways through gardens.

Japanese black pine, inkberry, bayberry, tall ornamental grasses and a mixture of twiggy deciduous shrubs were planted to provide variety in color and texture while subduing views between the outdoor living areas and the road.

Broad lawn swaths were juxtaposed with planting beds of spirea, hydrangea, dwarf pines and perennials. The beds were mulched with washed pebbles and gravel to carry the beach theme through the landscape.

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Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Energy Adviser Landscaping Can Keep Home Cool Bills Down

Our yard is boring with just a lot of grass. The house faces east, which means our living area in the back of the house gets hot in summer, even though I close the blinds. What kind of landscaping do you suggest that could help cool the house?

The right kind of landscaping can enhance the look of a home, offer more outdoor living space and even help cool a house in summer. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that carefully positioned trees can save up to 25 percent of a typical household’s energy used for cooling.

A well-designed yard offers environmental benefits, such as controlling erosion or limiting runoff, providing food and habitat for wildlife, and cleaning the air by absorbing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen.

Landscape design typically is site specific, but in general, deciduous trees that shade in summer and drop their leaves in winter are the best choice for shading a house. Mike Odren, landscape architect and planner for Olson Engineering in Vancouver, suggests planting a deciduous canopy tree on the southwest corner of the building if possible or along the south side that will allow for maximum shading in summer.

Tim Shull, landscape designer with Yard and Garden in Vancouver, said maples are a good choice of deciduous trees for our area.

“If the yard is small, the home owner should consider planting a more columnar tree,” he said. “Armstrong maple is a good choice because it’s narrower and fits into a smaller area.”

Exact placement of trees will depend upon where the windows are in the home, and if there are skylights or solar panels, which you’ll want to avoid shading.

Odren added that plantings around a building also will help shade it and reduce the amount of heat it absorbs and stores during the day that is radiated back during the night.

“Use organic mulch or gravel for paths and walkways rather than asphalt or concrete,” he said.

Another tip from Odren is to incorporate running water into your landscaping, which gives the perception of cooling. Install a pond or even a patio bubbler.

“If you have water somewhere around your patio, it will tend to feel cooler,” he said. “But it has to be running water. Standing water will heat right up and cause other problems, like a perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes.”

Whatever you plant, choose a species that will grow to the desired size, rather than buying a fast-growing variety that you will have to prune each year.

“If you take a 40-foot tree and try to make it stay at 20 feet, Mother Nature will win,” Shull said. “Look down the road 10 years.”

And before you plant a tree, look up. If your proposed spot is near any overhead power lines, you’ll want to choose a tree that will grow no more than 25 feet tall to ensure your tree won’t cause power problems once it grows up.

Reduce lawn

Lawn is typically the least eco-friendly thing in our yards when you consider the maintenance it requires. We mow it weekly, usually using a gas-powered mower, apply moss and weed killer, feed it, and water it — just to do it all over again.

By reducing the size of the lawn and planting native plants or drought-tolerant plants, we can have a smaller impact on the environment.

“There are a number of plants out there that don’t require supplemental irrigation, such as native plants,” Odren said. “Consider alternate irrigation techniques such as drip systems or microsprays that use water more efficiently.”

Both experts recommend staying as close to native plants as possible because they thrive in our climate and are typically more disease- and pest-resistant.

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Wednesday, May 7th, 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 greenery, 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 landscaping.

“We totally revamped the landscaping,” 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 landscaping 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 landscaping — which runs the gamut from so-called softscaping (such as turf maintenance and planting) to hardscape installation of patios and walkways — can increase the value of one’s home, and in a tight housing market, help attract potential buyers.

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

“It’s about curb appeal,” 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. “Landscaping 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 landscape 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, landscape 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 landscaping their mansions and estates.

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

To that end, his team members will schedule consultations with homeowners to discuss everything from “form and function” to plants, 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” landscaping style with crisp edges, minimal mulch and repetitious grouping of plants, also keeps pace with the latest trends. For instance, he’s noticing a move away from wooden decks, toward more fieldstone and Formstone patios. Another hot trend is the outdoor kitchen 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 landscaping.

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

“You can take $500 or even $50 and do basic things … Landscaping Services 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

Brussels Airport announces plans to build lowcost terminal to attract more passengers

BRUSSELS, Belgium — Belgium’s largest airport plans to build a new low-cost terminal to attract four million new passengers and to compete with other nearby airports already offering cheaper holiday and weekend-trip flights.

Officials said they would refit an existing old terminal building and add on to it, to provide a new gateway dedicated to budget travel, without the normal comforts like lounges or covered walkways to airplanes, which add costs to customer tickets. The new pier is to be ready by April 2009 and cost some $29 million.

Copyright document.write(new Date().getFullYear()); Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008

A Few Ways To Use Your Decorative Landscaping Rocks

Landscaping your yard is a great way to make it as unique as the people living in the house. By allowing your inner landscaping designer to come out and play, you open up a lot of different possibilities for what your yard will look like.

Of course, there are the standard tools of grass and bushes, and even a vegetable garden. But have you ever considered using decorative landscaping rocks? These pieces can add a welcomed contrast to just about any garden area that you can imagine. If youre not sure on how to use them, perhaps a few suggestions would be in order.

A Small Walk Down The Stone Path

One of the best ways to use decorative landscaping rocks is to create a place for your feet to walk while youre enjoying the garden. Indeed, these decorative stone rocks are a fantastic way to lead your friends and family up the garden path, literally. Make sure you choose stones that are smooth and level, and ones that will occasionally catch the eyes of the people walking by.

A Stone Marks The Spot

Stone walkways, of course, arent the only ways to use decorative landscaping rocks. Often these small pieces of art can be used to mark a change in your garden, or something to take notice. By placing the larger ones in strategic places, youll be able to draw a persons eyes to that particular plant of interest. Want your next door neighbor to notice how much work you put into the rose bushes in the southern corner? Place a few decorative landscaping rocks leading to the plant and chances are her gaze will rise right to it.

Camouflage For A Blemish

Of course, making something stand out is not the only object of using decorative landscaping rocks. If used wisely, they can be also used to disguise those little imperfections that any garden has. Placing the decorative landscaping rocks in certain patterns is a great way to draw attention away from certain mishaps in your garden.

A Place To Rest

A garden, if its not being used to grow vegetables is a great place just to sit down and relax. That is, of course, if you have a place to do such a thing. Using decorative landscaping rocks and a little bit of mortar is a great way to create a unique patio where you and your friends can sit and have a great conversation among the flowers.

These are just a few of the many ways that decorative landscaping rocks can be used by a homeowner to make their garden stand out. Be sure to plan everything out and go with what your instinct tells you. Chances are it will be simply beautiful.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008

A Few Ways To Use Your Decorative Landscaping Rocks

Landscaping your yard is a great way to make it as unique as the people living in the house. By allowing your inner landscaping designer to come out and play, you open up a lot of different possibilities for what your yard will look like.

Of course, there are the standard tools of grass and bushes, and even a vegetable garden. But have you ever considered using decorative landscaping rocks? These pieces can add a welcomed contrast to just about any garden area that you can imagine. If youre not sure on how to use them, perhaps a few suggestions would be in order.

A Small Walk Down The Stone Path

One of the best ways to use decorative landscaping rocks is to create a place for your feet to walk while youre enjoying the garden. Indeed, these decorative stone rocks are a fantastic way to lead your friends and family up the garden path, literally. Make sure you choose stones that are smooth and level, and ones that will occasionally catch the eyes of the people walking by.

A Stone Marks The Spot

Stone walkways, of course, arent the only ways to use decorative landscaping rocks. Often these small pieces of art can be used to mark a change in your garden, or something to take notice. By placing the larger ones in strategic places, youll be able to draw a persons eyes to that particular plant of interest. Want your next door neighbor to notice how much work you put into the rose bushes in the southern corner? Place a few decorative landscaping rocks leading to the plant and chances are her gaze will rise right to it.

Camouflage For A Blemish

Of course, making something stand out is not the only object of using decorative landscaping rocks. If used wisely, they can be also used to disguise those little imperfections that any garden has. Placing the decorative landscaping rocks in certain patterns is a great way to draw attention away from certain mishaps in your garden.

A Place To Rest

A garden, if its not being used to grow vegetables is a great place just to sit down and relax. That is, of course, if you have a place to do such a thing. Using decorative landscaping rocks and a little bit of mortar is a great way to create a unique patio where you and your friends can sit and have a great conversation among the flowers.

These are just a few of the many ways that decorative landscaping rocks can be used by a homeowner to make their garden stand out. Be sure to plan everything out and go with what your instinct tells you. Chances are it will be simply beautiful.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008