Top 10 Influential Landscape Architects

Posted by  on Aug 6, 2012 in Landscape architecture
Top 10 Influential Landscape Architects


If you are reading this article, you are probably a landscape architect, a Landscape Architecture student or simply a fan of anything landscape connected. You also probably have your favourite style in landscape design, your beloved era and the landscape architect you adore.
Like any specialized industry, landscape architecture has representatives that marked milestones in its development. These are the precursors of their era, the people who changed the history of landscape architecture, introducing new ideas and concepts or designing the most famous parks and landscapes. Their talents and vision put them well ahead of their time. Now, they are the source of inspiration, as people who were not afraid to chase their dreams. The list below contains names that are known to every landscape architect or landscape architecture fan. It was very hard to choose only 10 out of many great well known and admired names, but here goes!
 10. Martha Schwartz
Grand Canal Square, designed by leading international landscape architects and urban designers Martha Schwartz Partners at night time on August 23, 2011 in Dublin, Ireland; credit matthi  shutterstock.com
Grand Canal Square; credit matthi shutterstock.com
An American landscape architect and one of the icons of 20th century landscape architecture. Her impressive and controversial gardens are very different from what we are used to – sometimes they even contain neither plants, nor water! Schwartz’s favourite materials are plastic and stone. The characteristic features of her designs are bright colours, sharp lines and artificial structures. Her background is both in the fine arts and in landscape architecture, and her projects range from private to urban scale. Her most recognisable works include the Splice Garden in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Jacob Javits Convention Center Plaza in New York, as well as Dublin Docklands in Ireland.
 9. Antoni Gaudí
This Catalan architect, born in Reus in 1852, can be only called by one name: a visionary. His style was absolutely unique. It included neo-Gothic elements together with Oriental influences, passed through mainstreamModernism, culminating in an organic style inspired by nature to form an original mixture unrivalled by any other architect since. Gaudi rarely  drew any plans, preferring instead to work with casts or scale models. Apart from  architectural work, such as the famous church Sagrada Família, he was the designer of an incredible park in Barcelona – Park Güell. The Park is a masterpiece of design, full of flamboyant objects such as sea serpent – shaped bench or the famous salamander. It is one of   the most original landscapes ever created, inspiring the visitors and expressing the personality of its designer.
Park Güell; credit: shutterstock.com
Park Güell; credit: shutterstock.com
 8. Thomas Dolliver Church
Born in 1902 in Boston, Church was one of the most important landscape architects of 20th century. He is known for respecting the surrounding landscape, the local conditions, traditions and plants, as well as the client’s wishes. His modern, simple, functional but    elegant gardens were complimenting the house and were inspired by contemporary art. One  of his most famous works is his own residency of El Novillero in California. He designed also several larger projects, for example UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, the grounds of the American Embassy in Havana, Cuba, and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. He also wrote a book carrying a very important message for modern landscape architects -  “Gardens are for People”.
7. Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe
One of the greatest English landscape architects and also an architect, born in Chelsea in  1900 and definitely the best known English landscape architect of his generation. Apart from  designing and re-designing a multitude of gardens and parks, he was an author of many  books onlandscape architecture and garden design as well as a founding President of IFLA – International Federation of Landscape Architects. Among his other works we can find  the Kennedy Memorial, Sutton Place Garden and Hever Castle Garden.
Hever Castle Hever England; credit: shutterstock.com
Hever Castle Hever England; credit: shutterstock.com
Roberto Burle Marx
A Brazilian landscape architect, known for introducing Modernism to Brazil. Born in 1909  in São Paulo, he became interested in garden design thanks to his parents. In his projects, he  habitually used native plants to create blocks of colour. He had a vast knowledge of Brazilian botany and a large collection of the plants in his estate Barra de Guaratiba. He treated his landscapes like abstract paintings, always approaching his work with total perfection. His projects have a sense of timelessness and they work with nature, instead of   against it. Symmetry is not found in his projects, instead the plants are grouped in large clumps of one species and the water bodies are pleasantly free-formed. Copacabana Beach  promenade, Flamengo Park in Rio de Janeiro and Kuala Lumpur City Centre Park are only a  few among many of his famous designs.
Copacabana Beach; credit: Shutterstock.com
Copacabana Beach; credit: Shutterstock.com
 5. Gertrude Jekyll
Gertrude Jekyll is an inspiration to female landscape architects, possibly the best known female designer of all time. With her eye for the colour and sensitivity to form, she  created some of the most beautiful gardens in the UK, Europe and the US. Born in London on November 29th 1843, she became interested in plants and gardens already as a child. She  studied arts, colours, optics and botany – all this knowledge proved beneficial in her later  life and work. She treated the garden as canvas, painting it with plants of different colours  and textures. Yet, she never failed to choose the right plants for the conditions as her  knowledge of botany was also immense. We can still admire some of her work – gardens of  Greywalls, Hestercombe, Upton Grey, the Secret Gardens of Sandwich and many others.
4. Peter Josef Lenné
Born in 1789, this Prussian landscape architect is famous for his landscape parks. He planned and established over 250 parks, mostly palace and castle gardens. He designed many parks in Potsdam, most notably park Sanssouci, park Babelsberg, the Tiergarten in Berlin and many others. We can also visit his parks in Frankfurt (Oder), Leipzig and Koblenz. His plans are characteristic for spacious lawns, attractive views of surrounding landscape and picturesque groups of trees and shrubs. Many sites of Lenné’s work are now World Heritage Sites.
Sanssouci park; credit: shutterstock.com
Sanssouci park; credit: shutterstock.com
3. Frederick Law Olmsted
This American landscape designer, popularly considered to be the father of American  landscape architecture, was born in Hartford, Connecticut on April 26, 1822. Together with   his senior partner, Calvert Vaux, he designed many of the famous urban parks in America, most notably Central Park and Prospect Park in New York. He believed that urban green  spaces should be available equally to all citizens from every social class, which gave the   foundation to the modern idea of a “public park”. He was also a designer of entire systems of  parks and interconnecting parkways, connecting certain cities to green spaces, the author of   numerous school and college curriculum and the architect of the first planned community in the United States – the Riverside in Illinois.
Central Park; credit: shutterstock.com
Central Park; credit: shutterstock.com
 2. André Le Nôtre
Born on March 12th, 1613 in Paris, this French landscape architect had a major influence on  Baroque gardens in Europe. From the beginning of his career he worked for aristocrats and  royals. Later on he was appointed the principal gardener of King Louis XIV. There is no doubt about his most famous work – the Gardens of Versailles, which he designed and built   for King Louis XIV. Other interesting projects include gardens of Vaux-le-Vicomte,   Fontainebleau and Greenwich Park in London. Le Nôtre’s gardens are characteristic for the  height of the French formal garden style and include parterres, water basins, fountains,  bosquets and avenues.
The Gardens of Versailles; credit: shutterstock.com
The Gardens of Versailles; credit: shutterstock.com
Lancelot “Capability” Brown
This British landscape architect was nicknamed “Capability” for his habitual speaking of a  country estate having a great ‘capability’ for improvement. Born in 1716, he designed and re-designed over 170 new parks surrounding the finest country houses and estates in Britain,  among others at Croome Court, Blenheim Palace, Warwick Castle, Stowe and Milton Abbey.   He implemented the clumps of trees of varying heights and was fond of irregular, soft, curving lines. His aim in design was to copy nature as close as possible. During his life and long after his death in 1783, he was criticised for constant “improving” of the landscape and   destroying many of the older, formal English gardens. He is to this day still considered“England’s greatest gardener”.
Warwick Castle; credit: shutterstock.com
Warwick Castle; credit: shutterstock.com
The list above is by no means comprehensive – throughout the history there were many more great personalities and gifted people devoted to their work. I hope each of the readers will be able to find their role model on this list, however I understand that for every one of you the “number 1”on the list may be different. I tried to choose the landscape architects that influenced the trade the most – whose influence marked the important moments in the history of landscape architecture and whose ideas were revolutionary to the point of completely changing the world they lived in.
Thanks to them landscape architecture is what we know it today and we can from time to time look back and say that we are truly standing on the shoulders of giants.
Article written by Marta Ratajszczak
Featured image; credit: Shutterstock.com

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Marta Ratajszczak, Writer

Marta is an ambitious garden designer based in Poland, always trying to think outside of the box and express new ideas to encourage people to open their mind to the beautiful world of design and imagination.

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Unknown said…
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