In this article, we explore the benefits and different ways you can incorporate faux greenery stems to enhance your home’s decor.
Integrating plants into your home decor transcends mere design; it signifies a lifestyle statement. By applying the aforementioned tips, you can forge a seamless fusion of nature and design, cultivating a living space that not only enhances visual appeal but also nurtures well-being and a profound connection to the natural world.
Written by
Liliana Alvarez
Terra Nova Nurseries, a global leader in plant breeding, has announced a list of 25 companion plants corresponding with several popular colors of the year announced for 2024.
Written by
Eberly & Collard Public Relations
Incorporating indoor plants into your architectural spaces is more than just an aesthetic choice; it is an opportunity to create an inviting, dynamic atmosphere that fosters well-being and enhances the quality of life. The harmonious blend of architecture and nature can stimulate creativity, encourage relaxation, and inspire a deeper connection wit...
Adding indoor plants in your bathroom is one of the best ways to make the room more inviting and relaxing. Heaps of indoor plants can grow well in humid, moist, and warm areas.
Photography
Gustavo Galeano Maz
If you have plants you want to keep alive over the winter, you need to bring them in soon if you haven’t already. So please do it now and avoid killing them.
Written by
Felicia Priedel
Here are four easiest to look after plants perfect to bring to your dorm room.
Photography
Freepik (cover image), Laurin Scheuber, Severin Candrian, Susan Wilkinson, Zinah Insignia
Walls and fences are typically used to keep people and areas separate, but at the Desert Botanical Garden an unusual series of structures actually brought people together. We combined wood, concrete, steel, stone and block to create a variety of richly textured and highly functional separators that both physically divided and visually connected ope...
Project name
Hazel Hare Center for Plant Science
Architecture firm
180 Degrees Design + Build & coLAB studio, LLC
Location
Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Photography
Bill Timmerman
Principal architect
Matthew Salenger coLAB studio, LLC
Design team
180 Degrees Design + Build & coLAB studio, llc
Collaborators
Garden Staff and Volunteers
Civil engineer
Dibble Engineering
Structural engineer
BDA Design
Environmental & MEP
Associated Mechanical Engineers, PLLC
Landscape
Trueform Landscape Architecture Studio
Lighting
Woodward Engineering
Supervision
180 Degrees Design + Build
Visualization
coLAB studio, llc
Tools used
Autodesk Revit, Rhinoceros 3D, Lumion
Construction
180 Degrees Design + Build
Material
Polycarbonate cladding, galvanized steel, and galvanized copper. Sustainability and repurposing materials are incorporated into most of our projects. On this project, we used recycled wood, repurposed concrete formwork for the site retaining walls in the decorative and security fencing and re-used acoustical ceiling panels that were recycled from the Phoenix Children’s Museum
Budget
$3.5M Phase 1 / $12M Phase 2
Client
Desert Botanical Garden
Status
Phase 1 complete / Phase 2 scheduled to break ground in 2023
Typology
Cultural › Greenhouse