Gardens for Modern Houses: Design Inspiration for Home Landscapes
By (Author) Beth Dunlop
Rizzoli International Publications
Rizzoli International Publications
29th April 2025
1st April 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
712.6
Hardback
320
Width 279mm, Height 210mm
567g
Modernist-style architecture remains one of the most popular in housing markets all across the US, and this volume explores the full range of whats actually possible when plants and hardscape are considered as critical elements of the indoor-outdoor lifestyle the movement promotes, with ample inspiration for homeowners and fans of midcentury-to-contemporary home design.
A distinct garden design philosophy emerged along with modern architecture, intended to complement it in specific ways. Much of this is unknown to todays homeowners, however, and is explored fully here as interpreted by todays leading garden designers. Hundreds of gorgeous contemporary photos and in-depth plant information will give garden-enthusiast readers inspiration and the tools to re-create the planting schemes shown within, bringing high design home in accessible and practical ways and truly showing how a landscape can enhance both a houses architecture and the quality of its inhabitants lives.
The thirty-five featured gardens are from across the US and created by todays leading landscape designers including Reed Hilderbrand, Mia Lehrer, Wagner Hodgson, Marmol Radziner, Judy Kameon/Elysian Landscapes, Raymond Jungles, and Terremoto. Several homes are owned by celebrities, including Mandy Moore, the founders of Vince clothing, and others.
Beth Dunlop is one of the countrys most noted architectural writers. She was the Pulitzer-nominated architecture critic for the Miami Herald for more than twenty years and the editor of Modern Magazine from 2011 to 2017. She is the author of numerous books including Addison Mizner, Arquitectonica, and Florida's Vanishing Architecture. Her writing has appeared widely in architecture, design, and travel magazines. She has won many awards including a medal for writing and criticism from the American Institute of Architecture. She lives in Miami.