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The panel explored the intersection of natural and man-made materials in landscape design, highlighting the balance between aesthetic, sustainability, and functional concerns. Participants discussed how interior and landscape designers borrow nature to create cohesive environments, including outdoor “rooms” and hardscape features softened with plantings. Material selection — stone, metal, glass, composite decking, and synthetic turf — was debated, with attention to local sourcing, durability, environmental impact, and client expectations. The panel also emphasized the sensory experience of landscapes, touching on sight, sound, smell, and taste, and how design can evoke memory and emotion. Sustainability, fire safety, maintenance, and longevity were recurring themes, particularly in the adoption of synthetic materials that mimic natural ones while reducing environmental or upkeep costs.
- Borrowed landscape: Using surrounding natural colors and textures to inform material choices in hardscape design.
- Softening hardscape: Plantings and layered design to maintain depth without overwhelming the property.
- Context-appropriate material selection: Stone, metal, glass, gravel, and concrete chosen according to environment, use, and climate.
- Trend toward natural imperfection: Broken edges, less precision, biophilic design responding to a highly digital, precise world.
- Sustainability tensions: Balancing natural and synthetic materials for longevity, cost, and environmental impact.
- Synthetic decking and recycled composites: TimberTech and similar products for durability, low maintenance, and fire safety.
- Artificial turf considerations: High-use areas, water savings, lifespan, recycling challenges.
- Sensory-driven design: Sight, sound, smell, and taste incorporated into landscapes for holistic human experiences.
- Childhood memory and emotional recall: Design that evokes personal sensory memory for users.
- Fire and climate constraints: Materials must meet modern safety and insurance standards.