Caldwell Farm, Bristol, WI
Garden Dialogues

Garden Dialogues 2014: Houston

Houston, TX

 

On Sunday, March 16, get exclusive access to private gardens and landscapes in Houston and hear directly from the designers and their clients about their collaborative process.

How do clients and designers work together? What makes for a great, enduring collaboration? Garden Dialogues provides unique opportunities for small groups to visit some of today’s most beautiful gardens created by some of the most accomplished designers currently in practice.

This event is now complete.


Selden Straus House
                                                                                                         Photo by Ben Koush

Sunday, March 16th, 10:30am to 12:00pm | Houston

Selden Straus House
Keiji Asakura, Asakura Robinson (host)

Nestled within 25 heavily-wooded acres in the heart of the city, this Modernist home is occupied by its original owner, Mrs. Marjorie Selden Milby. In 1951 J.T. Rather, Jr. of Staub and Rather Architects designed the house, grounds and interiors with ample input from Mrs. Milby. Famed Modernist landscape architect Tommy Church visited in the 1950s and paid it a very high compliment –he saw nothing he thought should be changed. Over the years, notable horticulturalists including Lynn Lowery, John Teas and Charles Tapley have been involved with the property, but it retains its original design intent.  more photos


River Oaks Modernist Estate
                                                                                                          Photo by Gail Hartz

Sunday, March 16th, 1:30 to 2:30pm | Houston

River Oaks Modernist Estate
Gail Hartz, Gail Hartz & Associates, Inc.

Hidden behind a privet and azalea hedge on a busy thoroughfare in River Oaks is a remarkable mid-20th century International Style brick home by Houston architect Hugo Victor Neuhaus Jr. and grounds by Houston landscape architect C.C. “Pat” Fleming, in collaboration with Neuhaus. As part of the home’s recent restoration, Gail Hartz is expanding the outdoor living areas and garden, while remaining faithful to the original Fleming design. more photos


Raymond and Susan Brochstein Pavilion
                                                                       Photo courtesy The Office of James Burnett

Sunday, March 16th, 3:30 to 4:30pm | Houston

Raymond and Susan Brochstein Pavilion at Rice University 
Chip Trageser and Andrew Albers, Office of James Burnett, with Stephen Fox, Architectural Historian, Anchorage Foundation of Texas

Rice’s Central Quadrangle has been transformed into the university’s social center, with the addition of 6,000-square-foot Brochstein Pavilion by architect Thomas Phifer & Partners and a 10,000-square-foot covered outdoor terrace and garden by the Office of James Burnett. The terrace is covered with decomposed granite and planted with a grid of 48 Allée lacebark elms. Two low, linear fountains define the space under the canopy and movable seating accommodates impromptu gatherings of students and faculty. Additional plantings of live oaks and improved pedestrian paths reinforce the existing framework of the Quadrangle and the campus’s Beaux Arts plan. more photos