The landscape is a defining quality of our eclectic neighbourhood, and one of the goals of our design is to add something good to that landscape.
Here are a few key ingredients of the landscape concept:
- We want to feel a stronger connection to the outdoors and to extend our living space into the back yard. Mark A has redesigned the back of our existing house to strengthen that connection from the kitchen.
- We want to grow food while playing outside. Kate S has packed a ton of beauty and functionality into a compact back yard space. Think veggie beds, espalier fruit trees, herb boxes, cedar benches, even a sand box for playing.
- Deciduous trees can be natural allies for an ultra-low energy house. If placed well, they can shade windows from direct sun in the summer when you’re at risk of overheating, and then allow that direct sun in the winter when it helps warm the house. The tree in front of the new (south) house shown in the plan is an example, where it will shade the rising sun from the east facing windows in the summer.
- We intend to manage storm water on-site. The City has an excellent guide in its DIY Rainwater Management Standards for incorporating storm water retention, management, and/or re-use strategies into the landscape design (with accompanying grants through its Rainwater Rewards program). We’re still working on which strategies will work on our site, and debating low tech solutions like rain gardens vs. higher tech solutions like using rainwater to flush toilets. I’m a big fan of simplicity and less a fan of systems that will require pumps and filters and continual maintenance. If anyone knows of a stylish but simple composting toilet, I’m all ears!
Maggie says
Lots of good thinking is going into your project! If you’re growing lots of food in your yard, you’ll likely need all the stored rainwater you can get! Compostable toilet, eh?! Are you thinking fertilizer potential?? 😉