The most amazing gardens of the world (36 photos)

Landscape designers are able to hit creativity better than the boldest architects, creating magnificent shapes of plants and stones:

Lost Gardens of Heligan

"Lowarth Helygen" (Lost Gardens of Heligan) located near the town Mevagissi in the British county of Cornwall. They represent the island "jungle" with the only existing in Europe, pineapple plantations, two huge mud sculptures and a series of man-made lakes, created in the period from 1777 to the beginning of the XX century. After World War I, "Lost Gardens of Heligan" fell into disrepair, and until the 1990s, were in a state of neglect.

Mud Maid


Huge Baska Heligan


"Garden of Cosmic Doom" Charles Jencks and Maggie Keswick


















Residential house in Travessa de Patrochinio

This house was created in Travessa de Patrochinio designer Rebelo de Andrade in the Portuguese city of Lisbon. The structure has a vertical planting of 4500 plants of 25 species.





Artigas Gardens

Artigas Gardens ("Jardins de Can Artigas") in the Spanish municipality of La Pobla de Lillet created by designer Antonio Gaudi between 1905 and 1906..











Dwarf Garden

Peace "Zwerglgarten" ("garden gnomes"), which is located in the Palace of Mirabell in Salzburg, Austria, kept dozens of stone dwarfs. Mirabell Palace was built in 1606 on the orders of Prince-Bishop Wolf Dietrich.



Many of these articles were copied from the real dwarfs who lived in the courtyard, while some features and sculptures are some famous people of that era.









The vertical garden of plastic bottles in the project of the Brazilian TV show "Lar Doce Rar" ("My Sweet Home")





Patrick Blanc vertical garden, created on one of the facades of the building in 2008 at the Paris Avenue Alsace in France



Botanical Garden Conservatory Muttart pyramid in Edmonton





Woody circus

Gilroy Gardens, created by Axel Erlandson in the period from 1925 to 1963 and also known as "Woody circus." Since the effort is not paid off in 1963, the site was sold and has been renamed "The Lost World".



40 unique trees nearly cut down in 1977, but a savior named Michael Bonfante transplant them to a new location, opened to the public in 1985.



Today, 25 original trees with geometrical shapes are available to visit.







Stepped gardens

14 multi-storey gardens, made like a ziggurat, called "terraced gardens" can be seen in the Japanese city of Fukuoka. Created landscape Agency "Emilio Ambasz & Associates" in 1995.



Automated Garden Omega



"Each rotating element carries six" beds "for two and a half meters each. Thus, in an area of ​​45 square meters, the plant fails to place the array that is in a normal state would occupy about 450 square meters.



The system is fully automatic - each row passes through the watering and feeding sector, and illuminated at any angle, ensuring uniform development of plant organisms. This system allows you to effectively grow plants in any confined space without access to the world "- says in the description of the video.

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