Interpreting Landscape Plans*
Designs cannot come to life unless they are correctly interpreted.
Communication & Cooperation
Owner, designer, installer, and subcontractors
Basic Features of A Good Landscape Design
- Few designs include all of the necessary information
- Symbols and styles are as varied as the designers
- Some designations have become fairly standard
The following are concepts that are critical to landscape plan interpretation or canhelp to avoid costly errors
Orientation Features
- Perspective
- Aerial or 'bird's-eye' view
- Frontal, sectioned, cut-out or side views optional
- Compass orientation
- Plant selection
- Wind direction
- Lighting angles (sun/shade)
- Street address
- Location verification
- Bench mark
- Location for survey purposes
- Elevation for drainage and grade changes
- Adjacent roads, buildings and property lines
Scale
- Without a scale the design is useless!!!
- Elucidates the relationship between design and site dimensions
- Can be indicated symbolically or in equation form
- Typically I = 10 ft., or 1” = 4 ft.
Structures & Traffic Facilitators
- Existing structures, walks, drives to be retained
- Structures walks or drives to be installed
- Indicated by outline with or without fill patterns
- Concrete = solid or swirled fill
- Gravel or aggregate = dots or small ovals
- Bricks = small rectangular blocks, indicate whether or not actual numbers are depicted
- Stepping stones = irregular enclosed areas corresponding to relative dimensions of stones
- Existing structures or features to be removed
Location Of Utility Lines
- Major safety concern!
- Elevation above or below ground
- Impacts grade changes, irrigation lines and outdoor lighting
- Call the local utilities for verification!!! (611 on cell phone)
Contour Lines
- Connect points of equal elevation
- Same interval (vertical change in elevation) throughout the design
- Never fork
- Only meet at vertical cliffs
- Close together = steep slope
- Widely spaced = gentle slope
- Not drawn through landscape features
- Existing topography = Broken lines
- Proposed changes = Solid lines
Fences and Walls
- Stone = single or double rows of irregularly rounded blocks
- Brick = single or double rows of rectangular blocks
- Metal & Wood = thickened solid or dashed lines interrupted at intervals by open or closed circles to indicate posts
- Gates = angled lines in the direction of swing
Decks and Patios
- Brick, Stone, and Concrete usually depicted as enclosed outlines with similar patterns as with walks and drives
- Wood = Enclosed outlines with vertical, horizontal, or slanted lines mimicking the decking pattern
- Should include blow-up insets of specific construction features
- Similar information should be included for raised beds and retaining walls
Amenity Items
Variable by designer
Most commonly illustrated as an outline of the feature from aerial view
Water Features
- Irregular labeled outlines
- Sometimes a wave-like fill pattern, but this is also used to designate groundcovers
- Streams or water courses are often depicted as parallel snake-like lines, with or without fill
- Depth information is sometimes included
Plant Materials
Specimen Plants
- Broad-leaved evergreens = Circles with scalloped edges or rounded lobes
- Needled evergreens = circles with sharp needle-like or toothed edges
- Deciduous shrubs = circular symbols with loose irregular outlines
- Deciduous trees = large circles or circles with half hemispherical indentations
- Sometimes branching structure is indicated as radiating lines from the center of the circle
- An 'X' is usually placed a the center of the circle to indicate the location of the crown or trunk of the plant
- Where plant canopies overlap, the taller plant is drawn with solid lines, the shorter plant with broken lines
- Massed or in Planting Beds
- Grouped symbols as with specimens but enclosed in outlines conforming to the dimensions of the beds
- Indicated as a scaled outlined area with X's for the locations of plant crowns
- Number of X's should correspond to the number of plants to be used or this discrepancy must be noted in the design key
- If crown locations are not indicated symbolically spacing and location specifications within the beds must be included in the design key
- Ground covers = often indicated as shading or wavy lines within the outlined area
- Vines = often indicated as sausage-like outlines with X's for crown locations at the base of supporting structures
- Remember contour lines are not continued over beds
Design Key
- Key to all symbols used in the design
- Critical to accurate design interpretation!!!
- If symbols for bricks, blocks, etc. in the design do not represent actual required materials this must be specified
- Plant materials list
- Hard-goods materials list
- Optional, but highly desirable
- Detailed information
- Materials specifications
- Dimensions
- Installation procedures
Plant Materials List
- Common names
- Scientific names
- Size specifications
- Number of each species and size class
- Over-looked information to include:
- Shipping and handling instructions
- Installation procedures
- Post-planting maintenance recommendations
- Price information is usually not included directly on the design
Note: This document is a modified version of a class handout prepared by:
Dr. Michael A. Arnold
Dept. of Horticultural Sciences
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX 77843-2133
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