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Creating Good Impressions

From expansive commercial installations to small backyard waterfeatures, artificial rockwork has become a mainstay for many watershapers – and for good reason: It allows the builder to achieve looks that might not have been possible otherwise, and to do so at reasonable cost. In this feature, experienced faux-rock designer and installer Ken Macaire covers some of the principles he applies in selecting formations and in creating rockworks that dazzle the eye while looking truly ‘natural.’

From expansive commercial installations to small backyard waterfeatures, artificial rockwork has become a mainstay for many watershapers - and for good reason:  It allows the builder to achieve looks that might not have been possible otherwise, and to do so at reasonable cost.  In this feature, experienced faux-rock designer and installer Ken Macaire covers some of the principles he applies in selecting formations and in creating rockworks that dazzle the eye while looking truly 'natural.'

The most important use of faux rock is to make a geological statement – to provide an important accent or focal point in a landscape where none exists. My goal is to create rock formations that complement and enhance the natural setting and fit in harmoniously with their surroundings.

That’s a point builders who use artificial rock sometimes fail to grasp. They’ll execute an ambitious scheme with lots of interesting, well-crafted rockwork, but it ultimately looks unnatural because the rocks they’ve created have no logical relationship to any indigenous formations or anything else in the surrounding space.

I approach things in a different way – one that embraces the site and all of its features. I select, form and install faux rocks that, together, create interesting and beautiful statements in the overall landscape design. As I work, I make my installations to stand up to the question, “Is this rock formation believable?”

Let’s take a look at what’s involved in meeting that lofty standard.

FINDING ‘BELIEVABLE’ ROCKS

In this context, “believable” does not mean random duplication and placement in a landscape of any rock you happen to have run across in nature. The fact is, most rocks in nature aren’t particularly what I’m looking for as a landscape accent: I’m interested only in the most aesthetic formations I can find.

Think about it: Rock formations are simply combinations of rocks clustered together, and lots of the component rocks are pretty ordinary – too random to be used as the focal point of a residential or commercial watershape.

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This giant geode-like structure, set up as a Japanese well with spillover edges, adds a touch of serenity to a circular drive in front of a hospital. It also serves to show that, in creative hands, faux rock can serve a wide range of sculptural and design purposes.

The ones that seem to impress us are those that fit together with others in patterns that make rugged, powerful and/or dramatic statements. These are the formations that find their ways onto picture postcards, structures that present distinct shapes and patterns that catch the eye and create lasting impressions.

Used in a residential or commercial landscape design, these same rock formations can be equally extraordinary. In effect, you have the opportunity to take the very best of nature’s creations and duplicate them.

Rock vs. Architectural Design

There’s a perception in the design community that architectural design and faux rockwork don’t go together. Actually, I believe that any style of architecture can be enhanced with the appropåriate use of faux rock, provided the goal is to unite nature with structure.

The key, as always, is believability. Rockwork that appears to have been part of the site and has been accommodated by the architectural design is going to be believable. Rockwork that sticks out like a sore (or extra) thumb will not.

Not long ago, for example, an architect asked me to create a rock formation emerging from the wall of a mostly subterranean living room. I built a highly detailed, stratified rockwork at a 45 degree angle along the majority of the below-grade wall and incorporated the windows between the top of the grade and the roof.

The effect was that of a house built around the rock rather than a rock set up inside the house: The living room looked like it was constructed against the rock formation in the tradition of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater. The owner loved the raw, organic look of the rock against the smooth, white plaster of the interior walls – and the contrast worked because the rock looked like it belonged.

– K.M.

With every job we do, I come to the site believing that, by borrowing eye-catching formations from Mother Nature and recreating them as well-formed and finished rock formations, my work can make all the difference between the mundane and the dazzling.

That’s because good rockwork can make an impressive statement like few other materials. In fact, I’ve seen rockwork create emotional responses in even the most stoic clients, who often become so inspired that they start asking for more rockwork to be placed strategically throughout the installation.

All that’s required to reach this level of customer approval is observing and recreating the most aesthetically pleasing forms that nature has to offer – and the key is getting out into the wide world with eyes open and alert to the possibilities. Selecting real rocks from which to take a casting is an extremely exciting part of the work; actually seeing them duplicated as castings is also satisfying because we know that our inventory of authentic forms expands each time we take new molds. As we’ve progressed, we have more and more forms to use in our work.

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Here’s a study in contrasts that demonstrate the versatility of faux rock. In one case, smooth stones provide ample seating space around a peaceful pond (left). In another, cliff-like sedimentary stones set up behind a spa create a grotto hemmed in by waterfalls (right). Finding model stones for projects as diverse as these is a fun part of each project.

But it’s not all about amassing a collection of forms: Rock formations must be informed by what you’ve observed and studied and recorded in the field – or you surely will miss the mark in your clients’ backyards no matter how many great rocks you’ve copied.

TIME-TESTED TECHNIQUES

That’s not to say that getting a good casting isn’t important! As do many in the trade, we get our castings by first latexing and fiberglassing real rocks, then making glass-fiber reinforced concrete (GFRC) castings from the resulting molds. These castings are direct duplications of the real thing, which gives our rockwork its authenticity – but that’s only part of what’s going on.

Working on sharply sloped sites in Southern California or anywhere else gives the faux rock designer ample opportunity to integrate spaces – rockscape, landscape, watershape – in ways that probably would not be possible otherwise. That makes the work both challenging and deeply satisfying.

The real secret to the work our company does is that it pleases the senses because it is what I call “geologically correct.” People tell us all the time that they cannot tell that our rocks are faux, and I know it’s definitely not because of the authenticity of details in our castings. Instead, it has much more to do with how we assemble and combine individual castings on site.

How is this done? The fact of the matter is that we play god. We take the time and energy to arrange the castings until they, in combination, make an artistic statement that effectively mimics an attention-grabbing rock formation we’ve seen before. We definitely don’t do this by simply grouting castings together in random patterns. This would result in a formation that might be authentic in detail but that would make absolutely no sense geologically.

Real Walls, Faux Rock

Retaining walls tend to be monuments to structural austerity, especially in Southern California, where so many of the homes we work on are cut into hillsides.

The problem of hiding or at least softening stark retaining walls comes up often, and the usual solutions are stone facings, plant materials or some other type of “veneer.”

mt_gallery:I’d like to suggest that faux rock be used in sections of the retainer to create both interest and dramatic effect. When used this way, the retaining wall is made to look like it was built up to the rock, further validating rock outcroppings. Indeed, a stark wall punctuated here and there with rugged rock outcroppings makes an impressive statement.

Another possibility is to maintain the natural contour of the hillside by totally covering the wall with faux-rock formations, as seen, for example, in the photographs here. This greatly minimizes abrupt, severe transitions often seen with retaining walls and gives the landscape designer the opportunity to completely integrate the wall into the surrounding landscape – right down to planter pockets that easily can be included throughout the rockwork.

– K.M.

In playing this creative role, I ask myself: “What would Mother Nature do if those same rocks appeared in that particular environment?” More important, perhaps, I follow that up by asking: “What would she do to make those same rocks result in an arrangement that was so aesthetically pleasing that we would feel compelled to take a picture of it?”

To reach this lofty goal, we chop and hack, angle and manipulate our stores of existing castings, adding and configuring until we achieve the formation we’re after. This is not a process that should be hurried!

No matter how we combine old and new, we proceed knowing that the forms alone make no “statement.” It’s only through the process of assimilating existing and new forms and assembling them in eye-catching ways that we create rock formations that are not only believable, but rival nature’s best.

WORKING WITH CLIENTS

Of course, the fact that you’re bent on achieving spectacular results means nothing if you can’t sell your clients on your ideas. In a rockscape, you’re working in three dimensions. A simple plot plan might be enough to fire your imagination, but many customers need more.

But we usually start from a plan, typically beginning by recommending a rock type from our portfolio and suggesting that some new molds will complement the forms the customers select. We’ll guide and offer ideas, but we always listen carefully to make certain we’re working with rocks the clients really want. Once some basic decisions about size and type and quantity are made, we’ll often take the pre-selected elements and do most of the designing on site.

Rugged angular formations overhang a koi pond and spa in this faux-rock formation. Seen here at high flow, the cascades also can be rduced to create an array of subtle effects using multiple spillways.

At this stage, however, clients sometimes want a rendering or even a clay model – either of which we’ll create for a price. This need arises when the customer can’t visualize the project well enough to make the purchase decision, but, more often, clay models in particular come into play when needed to guide the efforts of a crew from another company. They give the installer an exact pattern to follow – an absolute necessity in the absence of an on-site designer.

The negative effect of using a rendering or a model, of course, is that using a plan can take what should be a personalized installation – one inspired by its surroundings – and make it purely automatic. Given that caution, however, models are an excellent idea unless you’re fortunate enough to be dealing with an outside rockwork company that also happens to like designing various combinations of rock forms on site.

Private and Public

I’ve always found that there’s a distinct difference between commercial and private rockwork projects – and it’s not all about scale. In fact, it’s about detail – and the fact that there’s less of a need for it in the commercial realm.

Think about it: Most often, these projects are viewed from distance or perhaps while speeding by in an automobile or on a roller-coaster car. So for some (but certainly not all!) of these projects, the customer is after rockwork that merely suggests natural formations and that serves, basically, as a theatrical prop. As in a movie or a play, the viewer is asked temporarily to suspend disbelief.

Conversely, private rockwork needs to be believable. It needs to be the kind of work that literally fools the senses. As described in the accompanying story, this believability relies not only on authentic detail in individual castings, but also on overall compositions that present maximum artistic beauty.

– K.M.

In my book, on-site design is the only way to go: It lets you work effectively with the topography and any existing or planned structures or landscaping. You cannot get the precise lay of the land, see the exact eye-level views and accurately take in all the lines of sight with a plan and/or model: You lose touch with the environment and lose sight of the total picture.

And my preference for designing on site extends even to large commercial projects. Models may be an expedient way of communicating with a large production crew, but to me, there’s no replacement for an on-site designer who is familiar with how to arrange, alter and interpret rock formations and anticipate what the results will look like once everything is finished.

MORE SOPHISTICATION

Lots of builders nowadays are familiar with the possibilities of faux rock. I suspect that others have tried and for any number of reasons haven’t been completely satisfied with the results. If you’re among these skeptics, I encourage you to take a second look because faux rock has come a long way.

Indeed, there’s a growing recognition that, like so many other aspects of the watershaping game, the ability to use existing rock forms and create new formations is a true art form, one that requires time spent studying natural rock formations and in learning how to apply those shapes in manmade environments. In other words, there’s no shortcut to excellence whether you use real rock, faux rock or both. It’s hard, sweaty work that calls nonetheless for sensitivity and a designer’s guiding touch.

By declaring faux rockwork an art form, I don’t mean to imply that all faux-rock installations need to mimic the contours of the Grand Canyon or Garden of the Gods (outside Colorado Springs) to be effective. In fact, faux rock is as effective on a small scale in small installations as it can be in large ones. The key is to keep in mind that the job of the designer is to arrange the forms being used to create an impression that is believable, that makes visual sense and belongs.

If you settle for less, after all, you’re selling the rocks you’ve used as your models short.

Ken Macaire, owner of Environmental Aesthetics of North Hollywood, Calif., has been a landscape designer since 1967. From 1973 to 1984, he owned and operated Macaire Nursery, a landscape supply and nursery firm. During that time, he began developing techniques he now uses to create high-end artificial rock formations. Beginning with modest waterfalls installed in conjunction with small ponds, Macaire’s work quickly expanded into larger pool and spa installations. He now works with a variety of contractors, landscape designers and architects. His firm has won several National Spa & Pool Institute Design Awards for projects that have included his artificial rock installations.

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