Thursday, 3 January 2008

Sustainable

His work focuses on blurring the boundaries between interior and exterior space, and between ornamental garden spaces and the wider landscape. He is committed to creating better environments for wildlife and people, and to making as gentle a mark on the land as possible. As Pearson does not use much hard objects and focuses all on his gardening skills, this makes him more flexible and sustainable

Projects

Dan Pearson has done work privately and commercially. Some of his work are featured in Oxfordshire, Millennium Dome and Forest, Maggie's Centre in London, British Library Projects etc. The three Projects that were fascinating are the Millennium Forest, British Library and a private project in Gloucestershire.

Dan Pearson is a landscape and garden designer with an international reputation, Dan works with many leading architects on a range of cutting edge public and private projects.

About Dan Pearson

Pearson has designed both private and public gardens throughout the world including the Millennium Dome, Evelina Children's Hospital and the British Library Entrance Piazza, all in London, Althorp House in Northamptonshire, Kellogg College, Oxford, and fourteen roof gardens at Roppongi Hills, a mixed use urban development designed by Conran & Partners in Tokyo. He trained at the RHS Gardens' Wisley and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, undertaking further study at the Jerusalem and Edinburgh Botanic Gardens. Dan is the weekly gardening columnist of The Observer and sits on the Editorial Board of Gardens Illustrated magazine. He was joint author of "The Essential Garden Book" (Conran Octopus) with Sir Terence Conran and author of "The Garden: A Year at Home Farm" (Ebury Press). He has designed five award-winning Chelsea Flower Show gardens.


Dan Pearson

Wednesday, 2 January 2008

Studio Work

Shadwell Basin - Wapping







Brentford - Watermans Park






Kingston Roundabout Project




Tuesday, 1 January 2008

Portfolio

Badgeplot























Wey and Arun Project