Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Low-maintenance landscaping has been the biggest trend in the last few years, and with this stone and gravel layout, a simple sweep is all you need to get this garden back to looking tidy ...
Kubota Garden is a 20-acre (81,000 m 2) Japanese garden in the Rainier Beach neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. [1] A public park since 1987, it was started in 1927 by Fujitaro Kubota , a Japanese emigrant.
Rhododendron Species Foundation and Botanical Garden Federal Way 47°17′34.08″N 122°18′8.28″W / 47.2928000°N 122.3023000°W / 47.2928000; -122.3023000
The garden serves over 70 low-income, primarily non-English speaking gardeners. The average age of the community gardeners is 76 years old. While the gardens primarily serve low-income seniors, the Danny Woo International District Community Garden also has a Children's Garden in which 265 K-12 children go through Inter*Im's Seed-to-Plate program.
Bruce Swee designed the Interbay P-Patch flag donated to the garden by John and Vickie Bjorkman in 2005. Garden fundraising events also funded Bruce Swee's design and construction of the steel gates on the chipper/shredder storage shed in 2007. Volunteers who garden at Interbay built and maintain the structures and community areas at the garden.
Picardo Farm is a 98,000 sq ft (9,100 m 2) parcel of property in Wedgwood, Seattle, Washington, consisting largely of 281 plots used for gardening allotments. [1] It is the original P-Patch (the local term for such community gardens): the "P" originally stood for "Picardo", after the family who owned it. [2]
Lakewold Gardens was designed by the owner, Eulalie Wagner, with assistance from renowned landscape architect Thomas Church, to be a place for people, full of hidden spaces, eye-catching details and framed vistas. The gardens include a variety of gardening styles, from the European boxwood parterres and topiary, to Asian-inspired shade gardens.
Denny-Blaine Park (One of the "improved parks" mentioned in the Seattle Park Board's annual report for 1909) The City of Seattle Parks and Recreation department lists a number of other parks, playgrounds, and playfields "influenced or recommended" by the Olmsteds, including the city's largest park: 534-acre (2.16 km 2) Discovery Park. [1]