Groundwork Design Nestles Landscape at Base of Mount San Jacinto

Built at the base of Mount San Jacinto, the landscape mimics the mountain range with clusters of small hills that create private settings, but serves as an extension of the nearby natural surrounding context.

by Jordan Felber
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Chicago based landscape design studio, Groundwork Design, led by Julie deLeon, has completed a private, mid-century home in the corner of Palm Springs, California. 

Built at the base of Mount San Jacinto, the landscape mimics the mountain range with clusters of small hills that create private settings, but serves as an extension of the nearby natural surrounding context.  

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“If you look at the site, you notice the landscape extends farther than just the limits of the property.  Outside of the limitations is a sparse, desert landscape.  This sparse-like environment created an opportunity for the landscape” Julie deLeon said.

“As you progress through the space, the sequence of the landscape becomes more lush, like a gradient.”

o2 Architecture, the residential architect, organized the interior program in a formal, modern and rectangular fashion so that the great room had unobstructed views to the mountain, while creating “microclimates for visual and thermal comfort” throughout the rest of the house.  

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“With all of our projects, the goal of the landscape is to create an extension of the interior program, so for the landscape – we organized the outdoor space in similar fashion to the architecture of the house, rectangular modern and formal, but we subtly added curves that mirrored the base of Mount San Jacinto.” said Julie deLeon

Handcrafted and imported from Belgium, Groundwork Design placed ATELIER VIERKANT pottery as a backdrop to the pool.

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Julie further explained, “We wanted to highlight the handcrafted pottery as what they are – sculptural elements in the landscape.  The planters themselves contain no plants in them, we felt the beauty of the planters deserved to be highlighted and plantings would diminish the sculptural aspect”.

“Locally sourced boulders are also placed in the planting beds to suggest the naturalization of the built landscape to blur the boundaries between architecture and landscape.” Julie deLeon

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Author: Jordan Felber

Landscape Designer: Groundwork Design

Architect: o2 Architecture

Photography: Lance Gerber

Pottery: Atelier Vierkant

 

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    • Jordan Felber

      Jordan Felber

      Journalist/Blogger

      Chicago, IL / United States

      Jordan Felber has been working in the landscape industry for over 10 years. He holds an AAS degree in Horticulture & Landscape Design (2012) and a BSAS degree in Architecture from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Following graduation from the School of Architecture & Urban Planning (SARUP) from UW-Milwaukee in 2019, Jordan worked for Bjarke Ingels Group in New York City. After leaving Bjarke Ingels Group in 2020, Jordan freelanced and consulted for upscale landscape design professionals throughout the US. While freelancing, he noticed the lack of resources for new and experienced designers in the field. Jordan, in 2021, shortly realizing this, founded The Landscape Library — an online platform that provides digital tools, resources and media for landscape designers seeking inspiration and education to innovate the field.)