Five Pillars of Design for Outdoor Living
As an architect designing high-end custom homes in Florida, one advantage of working in this climate is the opportunity to design outdoor living spaces as an extension of the indoor living space. We find a properly designed outdoor living space works on two scales: getting the big picture right and making sure small details come together. If a client wants a covered area outside and you do not provide it, the big picture is incorrect.
Putting together a list of “must haves” is important; every project has a budget and if you do not properly account for cost, the design will never be properly executed. So set a budget, stick to it and in the end you will be happy you did.
Relating to design, what started out as an internal office checklist for designing exterior landscaping became a journey into what makes a properly designed outdoor living space. The ideas presented here are nothing more than thoughts, and as such are not meant to end all discussion but to begin one.
Looking at our recent landscape designs, they seem to be unique among other contemporary projects in their ability to incorporate process and culture into master planning from the start — the attempt to find that unique combination of control over the environment and harmony within it. Harmony could be measured in terms of a romantic balance with natural elements and mythical Mother Nature.
The intention is to create an aesthetically pleasing result showcasing a respect and harmony for the outdoor environment. The guidelines below are not intended to limit or restrict creativity in design or construction, but rather to assure quality throughout the project.
We divide these guidelines into five pillars of design, which are presented in an order that represents the natural design process. Once these are understood they can be applied to projects of any size, scale or budget.
Pillar 1:
Invent within the rules
The design language of every great outdoor living space is documented in a common set of rules that have shaped the designs of generations of projects. These rules are tools to guide the conceptual layout of the outdoor living space, govern the way details go together and determine the appropriate materials to use.
While studying the historic shapes and decorative details of existing outdoor spaces can reveal what makes them work, designing a new outdoor space is not simply the act of copying the past. Ideas for new designs spring from the rules of traditionalism.
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