Gardens Illustrated Magazine

Work of the imaginatio­n

Innovation, radical hard landscapin­g and a refreshing green palette coalesce in an intriguing California­n garden designed by West Coast movers and shakers Terremoto

- WORDS KENDRA WILSON PHOTOGRAPH­S CAITLIN ATKINSON

Design studio Terremoto pushes design boundaries in a Los Angeles garden of eclectic inspiratio­n and California­n vibe

Manicured and private are two words that come to mind when thinking of Bel Air, the prosperous neighbourh­ood on the west side of Los Angeles. Basking in the foothills of the Santa Monica mountains, Bel Air – as the name implies – is fresher and cooler than the urban valleys, including Hollywood and Downtown. Up here, reminders of the native landscape of Southern California are more apparent, with venerable trees, hill-covering chaparral (evergreen shrub communitie­s) and coastal sage scrub. The wilderness of LA’s more sedate neighbourh­oods is generally upstaged, however, by green lawns and palm trees, of which only one species (Washington­ia filifera) is native to California.

This fairly large garden, hidden away on a side street, sits in a peaceful zone between nature and people. It is surrounded by California sycamores (Platanus racemosa) and coastal live oaks (Quercus agrifolias), several of which reside on the property, having been there long before the post-modern house was built. “How one goes about ‘garden-making’ around these sentient trees was a primary concern of the project,” recalls David Godshall of Terremoto, the West Coast’s most engaging landscape design studio. At seven years old, Terremoto has been attracting interestin­g projects from its earliest days, including the Getty Museum – and this – a collaborat­ion with ultra-chic interior designers and architects Studio Shamshiri, which the studio began in 2016.

David, who heads the LA office (his co-partner Alain Peauroi is based in San Francisco), loves constructi­on and carpentry (he is a former retail designer) and there is a flourish in Terremoto’s use of hard materials. A deck is never just a deck; here, it connects to a boardwalk set flush against grass and then gravel,

There is a flourish in the use of hard materials, textural horizontal­s reacting with the smooth, perpendicu­lar planes of the house

There are Mediterran­ean moments, desert moments and nods towards the new perennial movement – all pulled together with California natives

Terremoto’s graceful planting style encourages clients in the direction of native ecology, rather than clobbering them over the head with it

these textural horizontal­s reacting with the smooth, perpendicu­lar planes of the house. It is a showcase for specimen trees, shrubs and succulents, before plant life tumbles down the hillside in a more disordered throng. Terremoto – more of a collective than two principals and staff – has a keen appreciati­on of boulders, and a fondness for agaves, particular­ly Agave attenuata along with scattering­s of toothed A. americana.

“We use agaves because they’re strong, structural elements that can act as aesthetic exclamatio­n points or asterisks, within landscapes of texture, or fields,” says David. “They’re tough, don’t complain, and can provide a sense of lushness in what is actually a very low-water landscape.”

This brings us, inevitably, to the subject of lawns and pools. An irregular quadrilate­ral of grass, its geometry reinforced by a line of box, comprises the most formal part of the garden. “Lawns in California are a dangerous topic,” says David. “We infrequent­ly grant them to people under two conditions: one, that they are scaled appropriat­ely and two, that they are used. Small, thoughtful­ly sized lawns that people use regularly are acceptable in our book.”

Swimming pools, in Terremoto’s hands, are not about ostentatio­n either: this one is removed from the house, and sits serenely at the bottom of a ravine. “We like to surround pools with hardscape that has texture and personalit­y,” says David, who is not a great fan of infinity edges. “We’d rather wrap a pool in planting, so that when you swim, you’re surrounded by vegetation.”

Around the pool, further sunken by gracefully wide steps, all is smooth underfoot, Carex divulsa flopping along one side, and a well-placed Mexican grass tree (Dasylirion longissimu­m) spilling out of a pot. Between the pool and the house is what David best describes as “a wild, textural, native hillside of sage and lavender” that is stopped dead in its tracks at the top by the formal box hedge. The native hillside is mainly made up of three endemic sages,

Southern California’s coastal scrub: Salvia apiana, S. clevelandi­i and S. mellifera. Around some narrower steps, which make possible a quick dash from pool to dining area with bare feet, the mostly green-and-silver planting is enhanced by Cercis canadensis ‘Forest Pansy’, “the shade of a booming Cabernet”. The main set of steps down to the pool by the front of the house mixes more sage with rounds of Lolium mairei from Morocco and Echium fastuosum from Madeira.

With its hot, dry summers and cool, wet winters, California has been identified as having a ‘Mediterran­ean’ climate. Mediterran­ean plants thrive here; as a term, however, it is used for describing five regions in the world that are considered biodiversi­ty hotspots. Sharing a similar latitude and occurring on the western edges of continents, these regions are glorious for plants but also fatally attractive to humans. Terremoto (Spanish for earthquake) is keen to “softly” push people in the direction of native ecology, instead of clobbering them over the head with it. “In this project you see dribs and drabs of various typologies dancing together,” says David. “There are Mediterran­ean moments, desert and cactus moments, nods towards the new perennial movement – all the while being pulled together with California natives.”

Notions of beauty need to change, he says, and there are signs that they are changing. The Terremoto manifesto (which makes compelling reading) describes the firm’s approach as ‘critically regionalis­t and respectful­ly inflammato­ry’ but also ‘post-internet’. With all its downsides, David explains, the constant sharing of informatio­n has had a liberating effect, so that people are no longer held hostage to what is in and what is out. “Everything is there for the taking; you just have to do it well.”

USEFUL INFORMATIO­N

Find out more about Terremoto’s work at terremoto.la

The constant sharing of informatio­n has had a liberating effect, so that people are no longer held hostage to what is in and what is out – everything is there for the taking

 ??  ?? Tucked into the hills of Bel Air, the topography of this property is steep and naturally rugged, with “an idiosyncra­tic range of sun conditions”, according to designer David Godshall of Terremoto.
The narrow pool was built at the bottom of the site and is surrounded by planting.
Tucked into the hills of Bel Air, the topography of this property is steep and naturally rugged, with “an idiosyncra­tic range of sun conditions”, according to designer David Godshall of Terremoto. The narrow pool was built at the bottom of the site and is surrounded by planting.
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 ??  ?? Above The hillside, looking up from a timber stairway leading to the pool. Agave attenuata and larger, toothed
A. americana are scattered amid Echium fastuosum and native sage (Salvia apiana and S. clevelandi­i), before stopping at a line of Miscanthus sinensis ‘Morning Light’ and a box hedge.
Above The hillside, looking up from a timber stairway leading to the pool. Agave attenuata and larger, toothed A. americana are scattered amid Echium fastuosum and native sage (Salvia apiana and S. clevelandi­i), before stopping at a line of Miscanthus sinensis ‘Morning Light’ and a box hedge.
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 ??  ?? A barefoot-friendly concrete staircase leads up from the pool towards the lawn, flanked by Cercis canadensis ‘Forest Pansy’, an American native, and plants that are endemic to Southern California: white sage (Salvia apiana), black sage
(S. mellifera), Leymus condensatu­s ‘Canyon Prince’ and western sword fern, Polystichu­m munitum.
A barefoot-friendly concrete staircase leads up from the pool towards the lawn, flanked by Cercis canadensis ‘Forest Pansy’, an American native, and plants that are endemic to Southern California: white sage (Salvia apiana), black sage (S. mellifera), Leymus condensatu­s ‘Canyon Prince’ and western sword fern, Polystichu­m munitum.
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 ??  ?? “Our climate is sufficient­ly hot and dry that succulents tend to perform beautifull­y,” says David. “The yuccas bring a welcome psychedeli­c element.” Between Yucca rostrata by the olive tree and Euphorbia bracteata shooting out of a pot by the house, sits a large, toothed Agave americana.
“Our climate is sufficient­ly hot and dry that succulents tend to perform beautifull­y,” says David. “The yuccas bring a welcome psychedeli­c element.” Between Yucca rostrata by the olive tree and Euphorbia bracteata shooting out of a pot by the house, sits a large, toothed Agave americana.
 ??  ?? Dasylirion longissimu­m spills out of a pot by the swimming pool, between a gingko tree and a fringe of Carex divulsa. The hedge is Ficus benjamina. Behind the vintage wire chairs, a staircase of timber and gravel is flanked by Pennisetum sphacelatu­m and Echium fastuosum.
Dasylirion longissimu­m spills out of a pot by the swimming pool, between a gingko tree and a fringe of Carex divulsa. The hedge is Ficus benjamina. Behind the vintage wire chairs, a staircase of timber and gravel is flanked by Pennisetum sphacelatu­m and Echium fastuosum.
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