Italian Gardens
Italian Gardens
Italian Gardens
• Terracing
• Terraced on a gently sloping hillside. The
various levels are joined up by paths and
short flights of steps.
• Terraces are used mainly to divide the garden
into "rooms" with varying "moods", and to
limit the views and vistas.
• A connecting terrace should come as a
surprise when climbing up the garden.
• Looking down from the villa, however, the
terraces should create a tableau of pleasing
vistas, artistically sculpted views.
FEATURES
• Potted Plants
• Terra-cotta pots, often covered with figures and designs, are common decorative
features in Renaissance Gardens.
• Flowers, fruit trees and herbs can be potted up and moved around the garden for
variety and added color. They are almost always displayed in balanced symmetry.
• Water Features
• Water always plays a part in Classical Italian Gardens.
• Primarily the water is for irrigation to keep the plants from drying out.
• Secondarily, the water is used for features such as grottos, fountains, streams, and ponds.
• These features
can be central
features in
"rooms", or as
in the case of
grottos, off to
the shady sides
of the garden.
FEATURES
• Planned with the Villa
• The villa is always taken into account when planning a Renaissance Garden.
• The villa is treated as a feature of the garden, usually the central view.
• Shapes on the exterior and interior of the villa are often mirrored in the garden shapes
and structures, creating a harmonious blend of the two.
• But just as important are the beautiful vistas from the Villa when looking out of the
windows and doors into the garden.
• Garden Furniture
• Seating is spread around the garden so the various vistas and "rooms" can be
contemplated and enjoyed in repose.
• Seating can include benches, small patches of lawn for picnics, chairs, tables with
chairs. They are best in natural materials such as stone and wood.
• Covered seating areas are normally provided for protection from sun and rain alike.
• Pergolas covered in vines or flowering plants are a typical covered structure.
• Renaissance Garden or Classical Italian Garden is a light, open, peaceful, symmetrical,
soothing garden.
• There should be nothing dark, melancholy or gloomy.
• Custom made- should reflect the family that lives in the villa. Some gardens have the family
name written in box hedge.
VILLA MEDICI
• Created in the 15th century; this villa was located on a rocky hillside with a view over Florence.
• The Villa Medici followed Alberti's precepts that a villa should have a view 'that overlooks the
city, the owner's land, the sea or a great plain, and familiar hills and mountains,' and that the
foreground have 'the delicacy of gardens.’
VILLA MEDICI
• The garden has two large terraces, one at the ground floor level and the other at the level of
the first floor.
• From the reception rooms on the first floor, guests could go out to the loggia and from there to
the garden so the loggia was a transition space connecting the interior with the exterior.
• Unlike later gardens, the Villa Medici did not have a grand staircase or other feature to link the
two levels.
• This villa is well-known for its resemblance of a fortress.
• The garden is even more spectacular than the villa itself, boasting several antique fountains, a
variety of topiaries, and several trees.
• The garden does not have a lot of flower species .
SECTION
PLAN
THANK YOU