How Do You Build a Jungle?
In the cities of Brazil, a landscape architect creates abundant private gardens that rewild the terrain from which these metropolises grew.
By Michael Snyder and Pedro Kok
In the cities of Brazil, a landscape architect creates abundant private gardens that rewild the terrain from which these metropolises grew.
By Michael Snyder and Pedro Kok
On eight acres, a landscape architect challenges ideas about the legacy of the land, the museum’s history and climate change.
By Hilarie M. Sheets
After having a son with the famous architect, she built a career, often collaborating with Mr. Kahn on projects, including a New York memorial to Franklin D. Roosevelt.
By Fred A. Bernstein
Innisfree, in Millbrook, N.Y., “doesn’t look like other gardens.” That’s by design.
By Margaret Roach
The designers behind the furniture and lighting studio Pinch have transformed part of a onetime dairy farm in southwest England into a layered, lushly landscaped retreat.
By Ellie Pithers
More companies are eschewing manicured grass in favor of native plants, a shift driven by the environmental costs of installing and maintaining lawns.
By Jane Margolies
Every spring, jacarandas bloom in Mexico City. The colorful purple flowers are a living legacy of a Japanese gardener.
By Elda Cantú and Marian Carrasquero
Plans call for more trees around the famed Paris cathedral, which is being rebuilt after a devastating 2019 fire, and for a cooling system in front of the building.
By Aurelien Breeden
New books on river scavenging, Dumbarton Oaks, eccentric English landscapes and a place called Lotusland.
By Eve M. Kahn
The landscape architect Julie Bargmann focuses on contaminated and forgotten urban sites. The results are both beautiful and socially conscious.
By Tanya Mohn
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