That the design of a garden—rather than the pursuit of perfectly grown plants—should be paramount was revolutionary when English gardener John Brookes began preaching as much in the late 1960s. But his protégé, Janice Parker, now an award-winning landscape architect and the botanical brains behind this garden for a Fairfield County family, took the advice to heart. “We’re trying to make a series of rooms outside that are welcoming, that pull people out,” she explains.

Various manicured terraces, seating and dining areas, and recreational spaces divide the 11-acre property, each one painstakingly aligned with rooms inside the house for optimal views. Parker credits a simple but effective grid scheme with keeping it navigable: “We know this layout on a primal level,” she says. “It rings a bell in our deepest reptilian mind.”

garden drawing
Megan Larson

Cutting Garden

Pictured above.

Landscape architect Janice Parker carefully considered how this area would be viewed from the back of the home, particularly as one passes through the porte cochere. Beds are made from corten steel, chosen for its strength and rusty patin.

garden
DURSTON SAYLOR

The homeowner clips Autumn Joy stonecrop, New Dawn roses, Angelonia, and various hydrangeas for floral arrangements.


Pool Garden

pool garden
DURSTON SAYLOR

Linden trees are pleached and underplanted with liriope, while boxwood hedges frame pink annuals.


Spa Terrace

spa terrace garden
DURSTON SAYLOR

Behind a hot tub replete with waterfall scuppers lies some of the property’s copious natural ledge rock.


See another Fairfield County, Connecticut, garden that relies on clean, formal geometry—but with strikingly different results.