Beatrix Farrand would have celebrated her birthday today, June 19, and so it seems like a good time to remember one of the greatest landscape designers.
During her fifty year career she designed hundreds of projects: private homes, universities, and botanic gardens. As a result of her accomplishments, she was one of original 11 founders of the American Society of Landscape Architects, and the only woman.
Farrand combined a scientific understanding of ecology and land management, with a strong aesthetic sensibility, and an appreciation for how humans interact with the landscape. Her gardens feel just right: a result of her design genius.
Among her signature elements are perfectly scaled garden spaces and the use of plant material to soften and hide building structures. She had a deep respect for mature and native trees. Of one of her most famous gardens, she wrote: “The whole arrangement surrounding Lover’s Lane Pool is, again, entirely controlled by the natural slopes of the ground and the desire to keep as many of the native trees as possible unhurt and undisturbed. The big walnut at the south end of the pool has been gracefully framed by the surrounding levels, and the pool itself so placed that it does not interfere with the roots of either the big silver maple to the north of the pool or the boundary trees to the east.” (from Farrand's Plant Book for Dumbarton Oaks, 1941)