#trends

Around, Over and Under
It's a given that human beings enjoy being near water.  That's why waterfront property generally comes at a premium and beaches are a favored destination for those who live inland.  Quite frankly, it's also why the watershaping industry exists:  Even if there isn't necessarily an overwhelming desire to get wet, the desire for proximity to water is almost universal.     This built-in need to be close to water is, I believe, resulting in an exciting trend that seems to be taking hold and is in some cases redefining the role that water plays in the environment:  More and more often, we designers are being asked to
Growing Awareness
Sometimes, just when you think you have things all figured out, something comes along to transform your point of view.   For as long as I've been a part of the watershaping trades in general and the pool/spa industry in particular, there have been those special occasions when I've had just the kind of experience that has caused me to see things with fresh eyes.  Case in point is the trip I mentioned in my last column - the one in which I was heading to
Growing Awareness
Sometimes, just when you think you have things all figured out, something comes along to transform your point of view.   For as long as I've been a part of the watershaping trades in general and the pool/spa industry in particular, there have been those special occasions when I've had just the kind of experience that has caused me to see things with fresh eyes.  Case in point is the trip I mentioned in my last column - the one in which I was heading to
Role Playing
With few exceptions, the most satisfying projects we've undertaken through the years have come when our company has gotten involved with talented architects or landscape architects - and sometimes both - as part of larger project teams. We embrace this sort of work and enjoy taking a role as a resource for other professionals.  Through the years, in fact, these collaborations have developed to a point where many of those we work with will automatically call us whenever one of their projects includes any sort of
Where the Waters Meet
I've been using the word "confluence" a lot lately - so often, in fact, that I decided to look it up to be sure that I wasn't misusing it in some way. According to Webster, the first definition of confluence is "a flowing together of two or more streams," with a second meaning of "a gathering, flowing, or meeting together at one juncture or point."  To me, it's a perfect word to describe a trend that's redefining the watershaping industries - that is, a growing confluence between the pool/spa and pond/stream industries. Coming from the pool/spa side of the discussion, I can recall a time not very long ago when ponds and streams were only rarely if ever considered by anyone in my business.  What could pools and spas possibly have in common with
Across the Grounds
It's no exaggeration to say that landscape design, whether residential or commercial, is in something of a rut these days.  Nor is it saying anything new. Even in settings separated by great distance - a planned community in Plano, Texas, for example, compared to one in Toms River, N.J. - you'll find almost the exact same hardscape and planting treatments.  There's just an incredible homogeneity in design these days. If you find yourself depressed by that predictability (or are stuck in those creative doldrums yourself), I strongly recommend picking up a copy of Breaking Ground:  Portraits of Ten Garden Designers (Artisan, a division of Workman Publishing, 1997).  Written by Page Dickey, this heavily illustrated 208-page text treats us to insightful and intimate looks at a set of extraordinarily diverse
Across the Grounds
It's no exaggeration to say that landscape design, whether residential or commercial, is in something of a rut these days.  Nor is it saying anything new. Even in settings separated by great distance - a planned community in Plano, Texas, for example, compared to one in Toms River, N.J. - you'll find almost the exact same hardscape and planting treatments.  There's just an incredible homogeneity in design these days. If you find yourself depressed by that predictability (or are stuck in those creative doldrums yourself), I strongly recommend picking up a copy of Breaking Ground:  Portraits of Ten Garden Designers (Artisan, a division of Workman Publishing, 1997).  Written by Page Dickey, this heavily illustrated 208-page text treats us to insightful and intimate looks at a set of extraordinarily diverse
A Question of Balance
Reader Chris Walton asked a great question in response to comments I've made in a couple of recent columns about the value of detailed plans:  "Why do we in the pool industry lump sales, design and project assessment into one job description?" In the message surrounding his question, he explained in some detail that his firm, PoolDizine, Inc., of Jacksonville, Fla., takes basic plans and proposals for swimming pools and other watershapes and turns them into complete and extremely detailed sets of construction documents and plan drawings that can be used in generating accurate bids and that also provide detailed specifications for the construction process. To be sure, he has an interest in altering
Finding Ways
Last month, I jumped into the New Year with a discussion of how the trends we face these days are influencing our recent experiences in business, society and life in general.   In doing so, we navigated our through a mixed bag of factors - advancing technology, interesting economic times and complex legal conditions on the grand scale up alongside local, narrower issues having to do with the emergence of the watershaping business, the wayward nature of trade associations and the state of relevant education for our trades.   All that was intended to set up this column's discussion of where we, as the watershaping industry, might be going in the months and years to come.  Pure prognostication, however, is an imperfect process in which I won't indulge.  Rather than get into the aimless game of offering predictions, I'll delve instead into
Clear Reflections
Some might say we're enduring the curse of living in interesting times; others might opine that the planet's just plain gone crazy.  However you look at it, when you stop to consider what's been going on in the world, in our country and in the economy and how all of that relates to our watershaping corner of the universe, it's easy to see that important trends and even greater forces are constantly sweeping around us. So much is happening that it's often difficult to figure things out, but the most important observation I can make is that not all the news is gloomy - far from it.  For a great many watershapers, in fact, business has thrived in recent times and expanded in new and exciting directions.  That's so true for some that it's fair to say that there's been little or no time left for reflection. But I would argue that finding time to