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12 meses e 12 jardins As melhores propostas para um ano cheio de flores






Tantas quantos os meses do ano. São 12 soluções para criar cantinhos no jardim que se irão revelando com o passar do tempo. Veja o que deve fazer à medida que as semanas forem passando para conseguir um jardim (ainda) mais bonito e acolhedor:
Em janeiro aposte no contraste
Para o seu jardim este mês, invista num ambiente típico de inverno sem estruturas para apoiar as plantas. O efeito é espectacular e apesar de o branco ser a cor dominante, o realce vai para o relevo e o contraste proporcionado pelas plantas. Uma paisagem única, muito difícil de conseguir nalgumas zonas do país, sobretudo a sul, mas que não deixa ninguém indiferente.
Em fevereiro invista no regresso da cor
Magnífico cantinho, muito protegido, que se encontra em floração já em fevereiro. Entre as plantas, amores-perfeitos, narcisos, muitos narcisos e as túlipas à espera do próximo mês quando a floração neste local atinge o seu apogeu. Repare na profusão de cor num espaço tão pequeno como este em que predomina o estilo rústico.
Em março é altura de pérgolas com glicínias
Para março, não há nada melhor no jardim do que as glicínias e os seus múltiplos tons de azul e violeta. Aconselhamos a colocar as glicínias em estruturas muito sólidas, como vigas de ferro ou em caso de pérgolas de madeira, as traves devem ser igualmente resistentes para suportarem o peso da planta.
Em abril é tempo de relvados floridos
Além do aspecto estético, um tapete de relva com vivazes rasteiras faz poupar água, porque são regadas por sistema gota a gota. Sugerimos a Armeria maritima que com os seus 10 a 12 cm de altura e as suas flores esféricas cumprem as mais exigentes expectativas em termos decorativos. Na imagem, rodeadas da bolbosa Fritillaria acmopetala.
Em maio invista em arcadas de rosas e murta
Em maio, não restam dúvidas, as grandes protagonistas do jardim são as rosas. Na imagem, trepam por uma original estrutura de madeira envelhecida que confere ao espaço um aspecto rústico. Debaixo das rosas, à sombra, as murtas completam este magnífico quadro primaveril.

Top 10 Names (Garden Projects) in Planting Design


Top 10 Names in Planting Design

Top 10 Names in Planting Design

If you are into plant design, nature, and/or landscape architecture, chances are that coating the world in vigorous greenery is up there on your to-do list. However, sometimes doing so isn’t as easy as it seems, because without sufficient planting-design expertise, sooner or later you are bound to blunder. The following 10 names are professionals possessing authentic horticultural and planting flair, so take note.
10. Paul Thompson
Excellent display of a rich planting scheme; credit: Paul Thompson
Excellent display of a rich planting scheme; credit: Paul Thompson
Landscape architect and deft planting designer Paul Thompson is a leading figure on the Australian scene. Forty years of experience has resulted in Thompson accruing serious plant performance know-how for species that aren’t so commonly cultivated in Australia. He was the brain behind the planting design for The Australian Garden, winner of the World Landscape of the Year in 2013.
Recommended reading: Australian Planting Design by Paul Thompson
 9. Noel Kingsbury
planting in the famous Hihgline project; credit: Stuart Monk / Shutterstock.com
Planting in the famous Hihgline project; credit: Stuart Monk / Shutterstock.com
A gardener since childhood, Kingsbury is also a plantsman, writer, researcher, teacher, and innovator. He is best known for his naturalistic approach to planting design, and is an advocate of the new way of using perennials that work with, rather than against, nature. He has written a plethora of books on garden matters, including a history of plant breeding, and has collaborated on several books with leading garden designer Piet Oudolf.
Recommended reading: Planting: A New Perspective by Noel Kingsbury
 8. Thomas Rainer
An incredible display of texture and colour; credit: Thomas Rainer
An incredible display of texture and colour; credit: Thomas Rainer
Washington-based landscape architect, teacher, and writer Thomas Rainer is a proponent for design aesthetics that interpret nature, rather than imitate it. Predominately using a native palette of grasses and perennials, his most notable work around America include the U.S. Capitol grounds, the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, and The New York Botanical Gardens.
Check out his blog Grounded Design
7. Tom Stuart-Smith
Stuart-Smith is a British landscape architect whose planting designs are highly reputed for seamlessly integrating naturalism with modernity. To date, he has garnered eight gold medals at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show. Perhaps his most widely recognized work is that of the Jubilee Garden at Windsor Castle, seen by more than a million visitors every year.
Recommended reading: The Barn Garden: Making a Place by Tom Stuart-Smith
6. Patrick Blanc
An incredible green wall display; credit: Patrick Blanc
An incredible green wall display; credit: Patrick Blanc
Known worldwide for inventing the concept of le mur vegetal, the French botanist and designer deservedly makes the list. Blanc works as a researcher with the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris, and from the age of 12 has been getting his hands dirty experimenting with ways to propagate plants sans soil and light.
Recommended reading: The Vertical Garden: From Nature to the City  by Partick Blanc
5. Kongjian Yu
Shengyang Jianzhu University campus; credit: Kongjian  Yu
Shengyang Jianzhu University campus; credit: Kongjian Yu
Yu is the founder of prolific Chinese design group Turenscape, whose work often focuses on adapting to flood and environmental crises. He abhors China’s urban elite ornamental landscaping, instead expounding the benefits of China’s traditional peasant aesthetic, using agriculture and productive rural landscapes to obtain survival and productivity.
Recommended reading: Designed Ecologies: The Landscape Architecture of Kongjian Yu by William Saunders
4. Nigel Dunnett
Professor Nigel Dunnett work revolves around creating dynamic and ecologically functional landscapes, and was the mastermind behind the intensely hued wildflower meadows surrounding London’s Olympic Park. He is an advocate and expert on green roofs, pictorial meadows and water sensitive urban design, and has authored several books on the subjects.
Mixed boarder used to great effect; credit: Nigell Dunnett

Recommended reading:  Planting Green Roofs and Living Walls by Nigel Dunnett
3. Beth Chatto
A lucious and diverse planting display - David Ward
A luscious and diverse planting display; credit: The Beth Chatto Gardens – David Ward
Beth Chatto has been Britain’s most influential gardener of the last half-century, and is considered a British national treasure. Remarkably, Chatto received no formal horticultural training, instead amassing extensive knowledge of plant ecology through her late husband. She has authored many marvelously written books and works on the principle that plants grow best when placed in conditions closest to their natural habitats.
Recommended reading: Drought Resistant Planting by Beth Chatto
2. Piet Oudolf
The Dutch master plantsman, landscape designer, and author pioneered the titular “New Perennial” movement that combines perennials with ornamental grasses, and is perhaps now most famous for his intermingled slice of nature on the High Line in New York City. He has an inherit understanding of how plants behave over time, with his work striking an impeccable balance between control and no control.
Recommended reading:  Landscapes in Landscapes by Piet Oudolf
1. Gilles Clément
PARIS, FRANCE - Quai Branly Museum. The green wall on part of the exterior of the museum was designed and planted by Gilles Clement and Patrick Blanc, in Paris, credit: vvoe / shutterstock.com
PARIS, FRANCE – Quai Branly Museum. The green wall on part of the exterior of the museum was designed and planted by Gilles Clement and Patrick Blanc, in Paris, credit: vvoe / shutterstock.com
Frenchman Gilles Clément is a horticultural engineer, landscape architect, gardener, botanist, and writer. His most influential work internationally has perhaps been his part of the Parc André-Citroën. For several years running, Clément refused the French national prize for landscape architecture, insisting it should be given to the real architects of the landscape — the anonymous French farmers, engineers, and foresters.
Recommended reading: Planetary Gardens by Alessandro Rocca
In the past, there has been a good deal of wrangling over how important plant knowledge is to the profession, with claims that many landscape architects are regressing in plant prowess. With such an array of vital skills needed in landscape architecture, it can be difficult to decipher whether or not an area such as plants necessitates further learning. If you wish to follow in the footsteps of any of the aforementioned names, you need to make plants your number one stock-in-trade.
The pursuit of knowledge is a lifelong journey, and I feel that like plantlife and your proficiency on the subject should be cultivated, nurtured, and grown over time.
Algarve, landscape, landscape design, garden design, plants disease, plant treatment, plant protection, palms, irrigation system portugal, landscaper, treatment of plants disease, plants, landscape, nursery, hard landscaping, landscape architecture, mediterenean, indoor plants, koi, automatic irrigation system, watergardening, waterplants, agriculture, compost, pinebark, fertilizer, garden, outdoor furniture, landscaping, garden and landscape design, irrigation and maintenance of gardens. Our garden center offers native and imported plants, trees, water plants, palms and outdoor furniture,Gartencenter an der Algarve mit großer Auswahl an Pflanzen, Bäume, Wasserpflanzen und Palmen. Wir bieten Garten Design, Gartengestaltung, Gartenbau, Pflanzenschutz, Gartenpflege und Bewässerung, Algarve, Gartengestaltung, Algarve, Bewässerung, Gartenbau, Gartenpflege, Garten Design, Garten Center, Gartenmöbel, Palmen, Bäume, Pflanzen, Zimmerpflanzen, Gärtnerei, Gartenanlage, Baumschule, Bewässerungssystem, Bewässerungssysteme, Landschaftsgestaltung, Wasserpflanzen, Landschaftsarchitektur, Schädlingsbekämpfung, Garten-Center, Schädlinge und Ihre Bekämpfung, Obstbäume, Ziergarten, Portugal, Pflanzenvermietung, Kompost, , Gartencenter mit eigener Baumschule an der Algarve mit der größten Auswahl an Pflanzen, Bäume, Wasserpflanzen und Palmen. Wir bieten Garten Design, Gartengestaltung, Gartenbau, Gartenpflege und Bewässerung,Unsere Gärtner und unser Landschaftsarchitekt haben langjährige Erfahrung auf den Gebieten Gartenbau,  Garten Design, Gartendesign, Gartenplanung, Gartengestaltung, Landschaftsplanung, Landschaftsarchitektur , Pflanzenschutz, Schädlingsbekämpfung, Palmen Schädlinge und ihre Bekämpfung und Gartenpflege,Bewässung mit innovativen Bewässerungsprodukten. Wir bieten Ihnen eine umfassende Beratung und Planung Ihrer Gartenbewässerung. Bewässerung ihres Garten mit moderner Beregnungstechnik, Beregnungsanlagen, Bewässerungsanlagen, Gartenberegnung, Gartenbewässerung

Dan Kiley - Almost Famous

Dan Kiley - Almost Famous

In his later years, you could find Dan Kiley with his wild hair and pants hiked up to his waist always brimming with opinions and ideas - or as the celebrated landscape architect Laurie OIinonce observed: "Dan's thoughts are like rabbits - they just keep leaping out." The peripatetic, Boston-born Kiley was an avid skier who could readily quote Thoreau, Kierkegaard and Henry James. Creativity, he said, was "a patient search and a joyful discovery."

Kiley was also among the most important, influential and personally idiosyncratic landscape architects of the 20th century and designer of more than 1,100 projects - yet today he is not well known. As Calvin Tompkins wrote in his New Yorker profile of Kiley: "Even a partial listing of Kiley's more important commissions makes you wonder why his name is not better known outside the profession."
Dan Kiley

Dan Kiley
(upper) Dan and Anne Kiley in New Hampshire, pre-1940. Photograph
courtesy Aaron Kiley; (lower) Dan Kiley in his Charlotte, Vermont studio, c.
1990s. Photograph courtesy Joe Karr.
And that was in 1995!
Kiley passed away nine years after that article was published. Since then, aside from the excellent Dan Kiley Landscapes - the Poetry of Space (Reuben Rainey and Marc Treib, editors), there have been no significant national or regional symposia, or any comprehensive surveys ... not even a postage stamp (Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., the only landscape architect ever honored with a stamp, was dead nearly a century before his was issued - by contrast, fifteen architects have gotten stamps). In 2012, the centennial of his birth came and went with no fanfare - in fact, no one really seems to know what remains of his built work in the US and abroad.
Regular readers know that through The Cultural Landscape Foundation, books, articles, symposia and more I'm committed to making landscape architecture and its practitioners more visible. So later this year, Landslide, my foundation's annual thematic compendium of threatened and at-risk landscapes, will focus on Kiley's extant legacy, along with an exhibition at the Boston Architectural College.
In preparation, let's take a moment to consider Kiley's most famous project, the Miller House and Garden in Columbus, Indiana - the former residence of J. Irwin and Xenia Miller. Mr. Miller was a passionate patron who made Columbus a Modernist Mecca by bringing in leading practitioners to design projects throughout the city.
Miller Garden

Art Institute of Chicago South Garden
(upper) Miller House and Garden (2005), Columbus, IN; (lower) Art Institute of
Chicago, South Garden.
The Miller home was a collaboration between Kiley, architect Eero Saarinen, assisted byKevin Roche, and interior designer Alexander Girard. As landscape architect Peter Walker, the 9/11 Memorial designer, said of the property: ''For many of us, that was where Modernismbegan.'' The Indianapolis Museum of Art made one of the boldest and savviest of museum acquisitions when it acquired the Miller property, which opened to the public in 2011, making Kiley's iconic residential masterpiece accessible to all.
As a former Kiley employee, Gregg Bleamwrote: "[T]he Miller garden represents transformation ... to the use of the grid as the primary ordering device." He added: "Kiley extended the lines of the interior rooms ... to form a structure of grids that would order the surrounding gardens. By using the classical planting forms of bosques, hedges, and allées juxtaposed against flat ground planes of crushed stone or lawn, Kiley extended the diagram of the house design to the remaining site."
Ironically, Kiley's greatest education as a Modernist came not from studying at Harvard, where Walter Gropius was leading the architecture department, but from visiting European gardens, particularly great 17th century French gardens designed by André Le Nôtre. The order, geometry, and endless sweep of landscapes at Versailles and Vaux-le-Vicomte are the conceptual underpinning of his oeuvre.
If that sounds like a rigid approach to design, consider this observation from the New Yorker: "A design should grow out of a landscape, rather than be imposed on it. That is Rule No. 1 for Kiley, who doesn't suffer rules gladly. He is a functionalist, who argues that there are no universally applicable design principles, and who approaches each job as a completely new set of conditions and problems." As Kiley put it: "[the] thing I hate is principles - rules, questions and answers, all tied up in a ribbon. That's what most people want - they want all the answers." He was also disdainful of fashionable design: "I think when people have to be amused and it's fashionable, that's when the whole thing comes apart. If you do that in architecture and landscape architecture, you're in the fashion business, doing the latest thing that titillates, and it's not that serious."
Oakland Museum of Art

Fountain Place
(upper) Oakland Museum of Art, Oakland, CA; (lower) Fountain Place, Dallas,
TX.
Kiley's genius involved understanding the dimensions of space. As Tompkins' wrote: "Garden design is only one aspect of landscape architecture, which concerns itself primarily with space and structure and only incidentally with garden beds, herbaceous borders, and ornamental shrubbery." Kiley talked about the spacing of trees in a landscape as being "like the windows in the Palazzo Farnese. Those things are what make it wonderful or not, the spatial proportion."
Now, for those still wondering "Dan who?" his major public projects range from Dulles Airport to the Dallas Museum of Art, the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston and the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial in St. Louis (site of the Saarinen-designed arch), the Oakland Museum of Art in California, and the South Garden at the Art Institute of Chicago. In fact, Kiley is second only to Olmsted, Sr. for sites that have National Historic Landmark (NHL) status.
Other showstoppers include Fountain Place in Dallas, NationsBank Plaza ( now called Kiley Garden), in Tampa, and the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado an NHL designated in 2004. That's just the beginning - there are hundreds and hundreds more: public, private, institutional, and residential.
Unfortunately, Kiley's signature grid design has proved challenging for some stewards and several important projects have been destroyed including the Third Block of Philadelphia's Independence Mall and New York's Lincoln Center. Others are threatened including his commissions for the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in his adopted state of Vermont and the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City. Conversely, some sites are on the road to renewal, most recently Kiley Garden.
Kiley Garden

Jefferson Expansion Memorial
(upper) Partial reconstruction of Kiley Garden (formerly NationsBank Plaza),
Tampa, FL; (lower) Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, St. Louis, MO.
The challenge: we don't know how many projects survive and in what condition. Making matters worse, his archive at Harvard's Loeb Library is incomplete because a substantial number of records at Kiley's Vermont home and office were destroyed when the property was struck by lightening and burned to the ground.
My foundation is initiating this national dialogue about Kiley's work because landscapes are innately fragile and frequently disappear without any discourse or debate. If you know of a public or private Kiley landscape, particularly one under threat or in need of assistance, we would like to hear from you.
Postscript
While Kiley didn't like to write about his work, there are several well illustrated books that delve into his life and career including: Dan Kiley: The Complete Works of America's Master Landscape Architect by Jane Amidon and Dan Kiley; The Miller Garden: Icon of Modernism by Gary Hilderbrand; Dan Kiley Landscapes - the Poetry of Space, Reuben Rainey and Marc Treib, editors; Landscape Design: Works of Dan Kiley (Process Architecture No. 33); Dan Kiley: Landscape Design II, in Step with Nature(Process Architecture No. 108); Preserving Modern Landscape Architecture I: Proceedings from the Wave Hill Conference, edited by Charles A. Birnbaum; and Preserving Modern Landscape Architecture II: Making Postwar Landscapes Visible, edited by Charles A. Birnbaum, with Jane Brown Gillette and Nancy Slade.

Home garden easy maintenance

Celebrate Your Home Garden
Well decorated gardens are a blessing. They not only facilitate but also enhance the beauty of the house.
As this time we have been blessed with the most amazing summers since a long time. Every home that is accompanied by a beautiful garden, the home owners should make the use of this garden to it’s fullest during the pleasant evenings of the summer. While we stay indoors most of the time we should think of garden decor, so that we sit in the garden and enjoy the freshness of nature.
If your garden is still undone get some ideas, plant some flowers and the season related plants in your garden. Or just get a garden decor. If you don’t have enough time then you should spend some money and go to a garden designer who would recommend the perfect garden furniture and garden plants. The well decorated garden is a blessing for winters as well as for summers. You can spend you summer evenings to enjoy the nature in the garden and the winter afternoons under the sun in the garden. Those who don’t have gardens should think of an indoor home garden. They can even get their rooftops converted into a garden. Enjoying the nature is one of the essential essences of life and the best way to cherish this essence of life is by keep a well maintained garden.
All of the people who are free from all the responsibilities of life can now keep a garden. Choose and pick some beautiful garden chairs and place then at the garden center, so that you can then enjoy the fresh air in summers and the mild sunshine in winters. All the grandparents can let the grandchildren lose in the garden and enjoy quality time with them. Besides that, if your home is not cleaned up you can make your guests sit in the garden and enjoy the summer evenings with them. Although a garden enhances the esthetics of you home but it facilitates you as well by making use of the garden during the celebrations on occasions.
Cherish the nature while you celebrate your home gardens. Bring a change in your life with a change in the garden. All the gardeners know what it means to have a garden to celebrate and to play with while experimenting on planting new plants every season.

Garden center

The Romantic Garden
Who doesn’t want a beautiful garden, full of whimsical mystery and romantic decor? Take some steps and measures to create your ideal romantic garden.

Old World Elements
Think of adding garden statues, stone urns, covered pathways, weeping vines and create areas of the garden that are only visible when a visitor is actually walking in the garden. Resin cherubs peeking from the planters add a touch of serenity in any romantic garden design. Consider adding a garden folly to add a sense of history and mystery.
Garden Plants and Colour
Adding a little cottage garden style to romantic garden means attention to the flowers placed in the beds. Garden Plants and flowers should be placed in large groups for great masses of colour. Try using garden plants and flowers in shades of pinks, reds, whites, creams, greens and purples to create a full romantic garden of vibrant colour.
Fragrance in the Garden
Fragrance in the garden is also an important ingredient so add lots of fragrant flowers and spread them throughout the flower beds. Sometimes the scents from a variety of plants can mix badly if planted close together so pick wisely.
Secret Gardens
Create secret garden spaces hidden away behind tall shrubs and trees. Theses spaces should be discovered and not obviously visible unless discovered. It could be surrounded by a hedge or even a tall fence covered in garden plants and vines such as Ivy and roses. Arbors and pergolas are beautiful accents to your climbing roses and create shaded, romantic spaces.
Water Elements
Water is an essential element to a romantic garden. Depending on the area you have, a small garden pond with fish or a round stream with a centre floating island and small walking bridge could work. For medium sized gardens, a flowing fountain is a perfect addition.
Lighting
For romantic garden lighting, line the area with clear, glass candleholders and place a single coloured candle in each or fill with water and add delicate floating candles and rose petals from your garden. Lanterns and long candles, at night, are beautiful as well.
When romancing the garden, it isn’t necessary to use all the elements listed here. Take into account the size of the garden, the budget, and the time spent gardening.

automatic irrigation system, watergardening, waterplants, agriculture, compost, pinebark, fertilizer, garden, outdoor furniture, landscaping, garden and landscape design, irrigation and maintenance of gardens









Once a landscape design has been approved, we begin our careful implementation process. We give the utmost attention to quality and the sanctity of existing structures.







Our exterior construction abilities include:







Terraces & walkways







Sitting walls or retaining walls of all materials







Period gardens or theme gardens







Garden drainage







Functional plantings, such as visual barriers and noise buffering









Once a landscape design has been approved, we begin our careful implementation process. We give the utmost attention to quality and the sanctity of existing structures.







Our exterior construction abilities include:







Terraces & walkways







Sitting walls or retaining walls of all materials







Period gardens or theme gardens







Garden drainage







Functional plantings, such as visual barriers and noise buffering

A actuação no sector do Turismo assume expressão com o Adriana Beach Club e o Aquamarina Beach Club, em Vilamoura.


A actuação no sector do Turismo assume expressão com o Adriana Beach Club e o Aquamarina Beach Club, em Vilamoura. Estas duas marcas integram o património da ALDITURISMO, empresa detida pela MADRE, EMPREENDIMENTOS TURÍSTICOS e pela IMOVIA INVESTIMENTOS IMOBILIÁRIOS S.A., em partes iguais, e detentora dos terrenos, dos edifícios e do recheio de todo o empreendimento.
A gestão é levada a cabo pela TERRAÇO DA FALÉSIA que, por sua vez, é detida em partes iguais pela MADRE, SGPS e pela IMOVIA e tem como objectivo a exploração turística. A relação é estabelecida através de um contrato em que a ALDITURISMO cede, a troco de uma prestação mensal, as instalações à TERRAÇO DA FALÉSIA que, por sua vez, as coloca no mercado turístico.
As unidades hoteleiras, de localização privilegiada, com 300 metros de frente de mar, e boas acessibilidades, estão dotadas de equipamentos de excelência. Surpreendendo pelo equilíbrio harmonioso entre edificado e Natureza, dispõem de 432 quartos, distribuídos por blocos autónomos de dois pisos, num espaço amplo de 17 hectares.
Com esta aquisição, datada de Fevereiro de 2007, a empresa propõe-se a dinamizar aqueles espaços de acordo com as tendências contemporâneas do Turismo, indo ao encontro das expectativas de um público diversificado e que procura preencher os seus períodos de lazer e de férias, não apenas desfrutando do sol, do mar e da oferta gastronómica, mas ainda de um vasto leque de actividades ao ar livre, das práticas desportivas à descoberta do património natural e histórico que a região proporciona.
As unidades hoteleiras detidas pela empresa ambicionam ainda estender a sua oferta num período que, desejavelmente, se aproxime dos 12 meses do ano, contrariando a tradicional sazonalidade do sector.
Numa conjuntura de acentuada competição entre os mercados europeus de Turismo consagrados e os emergentes, situados na Bacia Mediterrânica, conhecidos pela competitividade das suas propostas, a empresa pretende alargar e fidelizar o universo de turistas que visita os resorts, maioritariamente famílias, tanto nacionais como estrangeiras, afirmando-se junto dos operadores com uma oferta qualificada de serviços