Gardens of the Year 2023 – winners

Building design

Pear trees from old orchards in the winning garden, photo: Feldman

The winners of the “Gardens of the Year 2023” competition have been announced. Munich-based Callwey Verlag, G+L and other partners organized the competition for the eighth time last year.

The winners of the “Gardens of the Year” 2023 competition have been announced. Munich-based Callwey Verlag, G+L and other partners organized the competition for the eighth time last year.

The competition is aimed at landscape architects and garden and landscape designers from German-speaking countries. They could submit private garden projects until July. On the other hand, manufacturers from the industry had until November to submit products for the “Solutions of the Year”. The award ceremony took place on February 14 at Schloss Dyck near Düsseldorf.

A jury of experts selected 50 projects from the private gardens submitted. From these, they then awarded a first prize of 5,000 euros as well as four commendations. Gardens as an extended living and enjoyment space, individually implemented – the jury looked for holistic concepts that achieve this. There should also be a strong idea behind it.

Feldmann Gartenarchitektur was awarded first prize in the “Gardens of the Year 2023” competition for its “Garden Experience Space” project in Bensheim an der Bergstraße. The garden is part of a historic villa. Both are located on a slope, surrounded by woods. Landscape architect Christoph Feldmann’s design brief included blending the garden into the surrounding landscape. He and his team erected dry stone walls, creating several levels from embanked areas. Different rooms in the garden are intended to convey different atmospheres. On one level, there is also a pool surrounded by lawn. On another, there is a fire ring, raised beds and a greenhouse. Elsewhere, you can sit under old pear trees from an orchard.

The planners added more large trees to the existing tree population, which Thomas Banzhaf, Vice President of the BGL, praised in his laudatory speech for the award winner. He continued: “A country house garden has been created here in the highest quality of execution, which represents a real antithesis to life in a metropolis – far away from a digital world characterized by concrete, roads and cars.” The jury awarded four other offices with recognition as “Gardens of the Year 2023”. These include “The Creation from Nothing” by Petra Hirsch Gartenplanung. The park-like garden was created over 25 years from a former agricultural area. And with “Begrünt mehr Dächer!” in Berlin by Potsdamer Gartengestaltung GmbH, a green roof finally received recognition.

For the “Solutions of the Year”, now awarded for the fifth time, the jury consisted of specialist editors from the fields of landscape architecture and garden design. They selected ten products in several categories relating to garden design, including garden sheds, flooring and garden tools. The first prize was decided by a public online vote: this year it went to the Pflanzenreich app by landscape architect Petra Pelz. The app is designed to make it easier to find the right plants for a particular garden situation. And it wasn’t just private gardens and products that received awards: For the second time, Ferdinand Graf Luckner is being honored for his photographic work with a photography award.

The accompanying publication presents the fifty gardens of the year 2023 and the award-winning solutions. With color illustrations and garden plans, details on plots and concepts, materials and plants, the garden portraits convey the diversity of the selected gardens. All fifty “Gardens of the Year 2023” projects, award-winning solutions and the photography prize were also on display in an exhibition at Schloss Dyck. From March 31 to April 2, the exhibition can be visited at the “Blühendes Österreich” trade fair.

Dieter Kosslick / Konstanze Neubauer
Gardens of the Year
The 50 best private gardens 2023
2023. 320 pages, over 350 color illustrations and plans
23 x 30 cm, hardcover
€ [D] 59.95; € [A] 61.70; sFr. 80.00
ISBN: 978-3-7667-2607-0

You can read about last year’s winners here: Gardens of the Year 2022.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Mold control: inspiration from medical technology

Building design

Microorganisms cause massive damage to cultural assets worthy of protection every year. Currently used methods for the antimicrobial treatment of cultural assets are mostly limited in their efficiency or use toxic biocides. An investigation into new methods for creating antimicrobial surfaces and their applicability in cultural property protection. Advertorial Article Parallax Article Paintings, books, textiles, metal objects, wooden objects, pieces of furniture – almost all […]

Microorganisms cause massive damage to cultural assets worthy of protection every year. Currently used methods for the antimicrobial treatment of cultural assets are mostly limited in their efficiency or use toxic biocides. An investigation is being carried out into new methods for creating antimicrobial surfaces and their applicability in the protection of cultural property.

Paintings, books, textiles, metal objects, wooden objects, pieces of furniture – almost all types of our cultural heritage worthy of protection are affected by microbial infestation. Microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi and molds cause massive damage to art and cultural assets and even attack building facades or stone monuments. Air pollution and surface erosion further promote microbial contamination. However, microbial infestation of cultural assets not only affects the objects concerned, but also poses considerable health risks for visitors and employees of museums and depots as well as restorers.

Although numerous biocidal substances have long been known and used to protect cultural objects against microbial infestation, their effectiveness is often limited. In addition, there are now massive toxicological concerns about some of the biocides traditionally used, so their use should be avoided wherever possible.

Taking into account the specifics of individual cultural assets, the requirements for a biocidal protective coating can generally be summarized as follows:

Very similar requirements are now placed on antimicrobial protective coatings designed to protect the surfaces of medical devices (for example implants, prostheses and medical instruments) against microbial contamination. Like cultural assets, medical devices that are used every day in clinics or doctors’ surgeries are at risk of bacterial or fungal infestation. Such infections associated with implants can cause life-threatening complications. For this reason, extensive research has been carried out in recent years, including by the authors themselves, to develop antimicrobial surfaces for medical devices.

Due to the comparability of the requirement profiles for antimicrobial protective coatings for cultural assets and medical devices, it makes sense to take a closer look at new technologies for antimicrobial surfaces developed in medical technology and to examine their transferability to the protection of cultural assets. Therefore, selected new methods for the creation of antimicrobial surfaces for medical technology, in particular on the basis of nano- or microscale functional layers, and their applicability in cultural property protection are to be investigated.

The text is an excerpt from the article “Medical technology provides inspiration. New methods for producing antimicrobial surfaces” by Thorsten Laube, Claudia Rode and Matthias Schnabelrauch from RESTAURO 7/2016. You will find the full article in RESTAURO from October 10, 2016.

In slow motion

Building design

by creating a subtle

Work on the central station in the Dutch city of Arnhem has now been going on for 20 years. As a result, skaters have appropriated the space.

Work on the central station in the Dutch city of Arnhem has now been going on for 20 years. Despite ongoing construction work, the area has been appropriated by a user group that the planner considers unpredictable and often finds no space: skaters. A success for the responsible landscape architects from Bureau B+B. But where did it come from?

Images: ©Hufton+Crow

The design of Arnhem station is the result of more than two decades of collaboration between the architects UNStudio and the landscape architects from Bureau B+B. It presented the planners with various challenges. Topographically alone: the station is located on the slope of the Veluwe massif and the planners had to overcome a height difference of 20 meters. They achieved this by creating a subtle, constantly changing landscape. The folded, undulating natural stone surfaces largely trace the terrain below, linking visitor flows and ensuring a smooth transition between the different elevation levels.

Pictures: Frank Hanswijk

If you are not continuing your journey immediately, you can also make yourself comfortable on the wooden benches that emerge from the edges of the sloping natural stone surfaces in the quiet corners of the station grounds. You don’t have to buy anything, as there is no obligation to buy anything to sit down in the rooms outside the station. This is one of the reasons why the Arnhem station forecourt is so lively. And it is in turn an explanation for the fact that these local people tend to belong to those population groups that are otherwise often pushed out of public spaces – such as older people, young people, skaters or homeless people.

The Arnhem train station shows this: The less the purpose of a public space is defined, the more opportunities users have to implement their own ideas. This is of particular benefit to population groups that are often deliberately excluded when planning public spaces. The square design also benefited from the fact that it took around two decades to implement. This allowed the user groups, who tend to be marginalized, to appropriate the space in the long term.

Curious? You can find the full article on Arnhem station in the February 2019 issue of G+L.

Translated from the English by Sigrid Ehrmann