The Technical
Side of Landscape
Symbols
Just like any art and science
activities, landscaping is also using technical symbols. These
landscape symbols are usually easily understood by those that
are in the same career or business circle.
Through these graphics or signs, landscape designers are
able to understand and read a landscape layout without further
explanations and texts. Usually, these design symbols are also
classified into types.
And to ensure that everything gets covered, even bricks and
pavements are assigned with a relative drawing or graphics.
Among the most relevant and prevalent in the landscaping
business and designing are as follows:
- Deciduous shrubs. These can be in a single irregular
circular plant-like graphic as well as in a continuous one to
show whether the plant to be implanted is lone or in also
continuous.
- Evergreen shrubs. These are drawn in the same irregular
circular graphic, but this time with lines to close the circle
or all lines having a focal point at the very middle of the
drawing. It can also be just the same picture as the deciduous
shrub but with a paralleling lines inside to emphasis it as an
evergreen plant.
- Large deciduous trees. These are drawn n the way a tree
may appear when you look at it at top view. Simple ones appear
in irregular circular forms with a bold dot in the middle while
more emphasized ones are in an irregular circular graphic with
leaves-looking drawings inside it as well as a branching
drawing in the middle.
- Large evergreen trees. These are drawn like the evergreen
shrubs but this time, bigger and with a point in the
middle.
- Ornamental trees. These looks like the big trees symbol
but with inner the-same drawing as the outer bold irregular
circle.
- Ground covers. These is probably the simplest because you
just have to make sketches in a down-up stroke that looks like
the penmanship of a learning child, or you can also make it
more interesting by drawing a leaf-oriented graphic.
- Accent or specimen plant. Drawn n such a way that it will
look like a plant’s top view, only that it looks like a cartoon
version.
- Decks and patios. There are different drawings for a
particular material of decks or patios. Brick are drawn just
how brick will appear. Stone will be drawn with a bold line
covering its area and within are stone looking drawings.
Exposed are the same as the stone, but this time with smaller
stone looking drawing to illustrate irregular aggregate
materials. The wooden deck is characterized with slanting lines
all over the identified area.
All these symbols though are in plain view. The next concern
in laying out a landscape design is the elevation. But this is
the easiest part as all you have to do is draw a symbol in a
standing position when you mean that it is elevated, while draw
it in plain view when otherwise. Also, the bolder the ink, the
bigger the plant or object is supposed to be placed in the
landscape.
There are also other landscape designs that involve other
design objects, drawing it on its top view will depict it in a
specified area. With these symbols, there will definitely be
lesser remarks to come with a design. In turn, it will make the
lives of designer and layout artists easy.
Editor
Peter
Charalambos
|