Artichoke is made up of a team of architects passionate about designing great projects for our clients such as our project near Guildford. We find that that, as architects, we create the exciting internal spaces and elevations, but it’s the landscape design that truly anchors a project to the site, bringing it into harmony with its surroundings.
Artichoke worked with the clients over a number of years to design and build a new house that replaced a worn-out house half the size. The finished house - as you can see - was a great success and the final mature landscaping helps deliver that total project package.
On this project, as the house neared completion on site, we are thrilled to see our projects take on new life when a talented landscape designer such as Maya at Flaura (https://www.flaura.design/) steps in. Her role isn’t just about “adding greenery” – it’s about weaving a vision that complements and enhances the built environment, elevating the whole project in ways that extend beyond just the building itself.
As with an Artichoke’s design process on a project, a good landscape design often begins with a spark of creative vision, this turns the landscape into an integral part of the architecture and making the structure feel as if it belongs exactly where it is.
As with us, their initial concept takes shape in the form of sketches, outlining different ways in which the outdoor spaces might integrate with the building, balancing lines, textures, and forms with the natural world. From these sketches, Flaura created 3D models (https://youtu.be/n8ON393iDuA?feature=shared), allowing the clients to truly see how their project will live and breathe in its surroundings. We find that on most - if not all – projects, this modelling of a scheme helps our clients to appreciate the design and understand how we are proposing the building go together.
These models reveal not only how greenery, water features, or pathways will enhance the architecture but how the landscape will evolve and mature. It’s in this stage that clients start to get a sense of how they’ll experience the space on a daily basis – walking a garden path in the morning, enjoying natural shade in the afternoon, or watching evening light reflect off a water feature that leads the eye towards the horizon.
Once the vision becomes a reality, the landscape design helped the house we designed achieve its goal as a truly liveable, inviting experience. Plants and trees don’t just enhance the home visually; they create a sense of calm and connection to nature, drawing people outside, grounding them, and creating a sanctuary within any urban or rural environment. For example, a thoughtfully placed garden or grove of trees can soften the lines of even the most modern building, while a carefully designed pathway encourages exploration and adds a sense of flow to the overall space.
It’s a joy to see our design for the house and the designers landscape come alive, as the building itself seems to blend into its environment rather than simply sitting on it. Great landscape design gives a project that special touch that’s hard to define but unmistakable when you experience it. A building with beautifully integrated landscaping feels like it’s exactly where it’s meant to be, effortlessly in tune with its surroundings.
When landscape design is thoughtfully woven into the architectural vision, it becomes the heart of the project, completing the story of the site. It turns architecture into a lived experience that engages the senses and grounds us in the beauty of the natural world. Every project deserves this finishing touch – the magic that happens when structure and nature align. With this thoughtful, layered approach, a building doesn’t just sit on the land; it becomes a part of it, creating spaces that are not only functional but inspiring.