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Weekly Feature, Jamie Durie


I have been following Jamie’s work since I became interested in the design of the “outdoor living space”. Jamie is a world renowned multi award winning designer who has pioneered and pushed the Outdoor living concept to new levels. What I see in allot of Canada landscapes is that people will try to go for a look that does not reflect their immediate surroundings. When looking at Jamie’s work, there is more want for what you don’t have and even less chance of making this environment sustainable for the our harsh Canadian climate. This is one of the main reasons for liking his work, showing off the unique colors, textures and sculpture art making them all consistent with the climate, and the emediate surroundings of of Australia.







Durie, 39, is founder of Australia-based PATIO Landscape Architecture and Design, author of six design books and a media darling in his native Australia, where he developed the original concept for The Outdoor Room With Jamie Durie in 2008. The new half-hour U.S. version, which Durie hosts and co-produces, is a fast-paced garden makeover series that follows Durie and two colleagues (horticulturist Beth Edelstein and carpenter/craftsman Stephen Zimpel) as they re-imagine and transform lackluster backyards for deserving owners.








Filmed mostly in and around Los Angeles, where Durie recently bought a classic midcentury home in need of its own makeover, The Outdoor Room uses sustainable ideas — such as low-water plantings and reclaimed hardscape — to design intimate, livable environments for erstwhile nongardeners. “I wanted to develop a show that cast a wider net, that didn’t just speak to the already converted gardeners of the world,” he explains.





On the show, Durie’s cutaway trips to Bali, Australia, Key West, Sonoma and other dreamy places inform everything from planting schemes and color palettes to furnishings and water features. “By throwing travel into the mix, I’m suddenly enveloping a whole range of viewers who can sit in their armchairs and go around the world with me,” he says.





Durie’s ambition seems to delight his on-camera clients, who end up with gardens valued at $75,000 to $100,000, and he admits: “I don’t build simple gardens.” For one nearly vacant lot in Duarte, California (its sole vegetation was a 75-year-old euphorbia), Durie built a matrix of Sydney, Australia-inspired, rammed-earth retaining walls as planters, benches and room dividers. Paired with kangaroo paws, tree ferns and other Australian natives, the solution created a lush-looking, drought-tolerant oasis. And in his darling Australian accent, Durie points out that the garden has priv-uh-see, a theme that runs through each of his designs. “Americans get shocked by this statement, but I say it all the time to my design team: If you can walk around naked in the backyard, you have given clients complete exclusivity,” he says.


On location, the collective excitement “is natural, unscripted and unrehearsed,” says Los Angeles artist Jennifer Gilbert Asher of TerraSculpture. Durie’s producers tapped Asher to participate in an episode featuring a San Francisco-inspired landscape using one of her contemporary sculptures. “The surprise on the faces of his clients when Jamie told them they could choose one of my sculptures for their garden was priceless,” she says.






Durie believes that the Outdoor Room is the best way to create a sustainable landscape. It’s not an unfamiliar concept in American garden-design circles, but his approach is refreshing and exciting. “You really can convert every room of your house into an outdoor space,” Durie says. Combined with a little of his star sizzle, that’s the takeaway message of The Outdoor Room. Watch HGTV’s The Outdoor Room With Jamie Durie on Saturdays at 9 p.m. hgtv.com





http://www.jamiedurie.com

http://www.jamieduriedesign.com/



This post first appeared on Rock Solid Landscape Design - 519.861.7910, please read the originial post: here

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Weekly Feature, Jamie Durie

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