stairs

Vista Releases LED Step-Light Fixtures
Vista Professional Outdoor Lighting (Simi Valley, CA) manufactures the Model 1505 Architectural Series LED step-light…
Stone Stepping
‘Stairs, to borrow an immortal phrase from Rodney Dangerfield, “get no respect.” ’   That’s how Bruce Zaretsky opened his August 2008 column in WaterShapes, then continued:  ‘[I]f my observations through the years tell me anything, the stairs set in far too many landscapes are strictly utilitarian objects – no more than a means of getting from one level of a space to another.  The only thought that seems to go into some of them has to do with avoiding trip hazards, which is important but hardly the most
Barrier Nets for Backyard Applications from InCord
InCord (Colchester, CT) offers many styles of netting and rope for tree houses, driveways, stairs,…
Making a Mountain Haven
I see gardens as entire worlds unto themselves - as complete and alive and distinct rather than as simple decorative extensions of architecture.  Whatever form they might take, these spaces should carry us back into the peaceful parts of ourselves and to the calm, clear realms of our minds and spirits.   This outlook has, in my role as founder and principal of Marpa Design Studio of Boulder, Colo., led me to consider landscapes as integrated wholes rather than as cobbled assemblies of solutions to various problems.  It's a positive philosophy and design approach that is fully on display in the project depicted on these pages. I was recommended by the architect, who was working with the owners of this sprawling Rocky Mountain estate on a major renovation of both the home and the surrounding land.  From the start, I was told there was just one major theme in mind:  The home and its surroundings were to look as natural as possible - as though everything had arisen organically from the roots of the mountains.   Neither house nor grounds possessed that spirit at the time, and the landscape was particularly deficient.  Indeed, the only pre-existing feature was a cracked
Stone Stepping
Stairs, to borrow an immortal phrase from Rodney Dangerfield, “get no respect.”   In fact, if my observations through the years tell me anything, the stairs set in far too many landscapes are strictly utilitarian objects – no more than a means of getting from one level of a space to another.  The only thought that seems to go into some of them has to do with avoiding trip hazards, which is important but hardly the most aesthetically oriented of approaches to take. In my experience, when stairs are considered in deliberate and creative ways, they can become
More than Functional
It may seem an odd source of inspiration, but I've always been interested in retaining walls. Even as a child, I'd see photographs of terraced hillsides rich with crops and wonder, "How did they do that?"   I've since done my homework and have found historical evidence indicating that the skills needed to build these structures goes back many hundreds of years.  I'm now applying those same skills today in devising soil-retaining systems for my clients. Whether it's farmers creating flat spaces on which to