
Garden
- different colors
- textures
- 629 m2
- in private collection
The lush garden surrounding the house offers more than aesthetic delight—it tells a story of evolving relationships between humans and nature. Towering old fir trees, their roots entrenched in decades of growth, connect the present to a layered past. Historically, gardens were conceived as sanctuaries, spaces for reflection, retreat, and connection to the divine or natural order. The house and garden were intertwined, forming a harmonious dialogue between built and organic worlds.
This connection has shifted over time. Modern front gardens often serve as curated event spaces, shaped by practicality and the desire for visual impact. In contrast, the gardens of old embodied multifaceted meanings: symbols of status, spiritual retreats, and sites of ecological interplay.
The towering firs here evoke this richer history. They stand as sentinels, witnessing the garden’s transformation from a refuge into a space of dynamic use. The interplay between the house and its garden reflects a microcosm of changing societal values, where utility increasingly supersedes contemplative purpose. Yet, these trees remind us of a timeless connection—a house is not just a structure, and a garden is not merely decoration. Together, they form a living, breathing continuum of culture and nature, past and present.