Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Thomas Church's Fay-Berrigan Garden



Bird's eye view of Berrigan garden ca. 1959.
(Photo courtesy of Fay-Berrigan family)


On the northeast side of San Francisco’s Russian Hill, just a block from the base of the famous crooked street (Lombard), sits Fay Park. Distinguished by its twin gazebos and easily visible from the street and sidewalk, it has welcomed visitors since 1998. It is the only private residential garden in California designed by San Francisco’s pre-eminent landscape architect of the 20th century, Thomas Dolliver Church (1902-1978) that is open to the public. Visitors are delighted to find this lovely surprise on Russian Hill--a remnant of days gone-by when the neighborhood was known for its fine homes in gardened settings.


Bonanza, October 25, 1959, cover.


Tommy Church designed the garden in 1957 for Brigadier General Paul D. Berrigan (1905-1997) and his wife, Mary Eugenie Fay (1911-1988). In his book, Your Private World, and in an article he wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle Sunday magazine, Bonanza (October 25, 1959), during his tenure as their landscape consultant, he described it as a design problem that began as a large, frustrating space with a specimen pepper tree (Schinus molle) at its center and exposure from three sides. The existing paths “plodded up the slope”, as Church put it, but didn’t lead to anything. Meeting the challenge to develop a functioning outdoor space, Church converted the 80’ x 138’ lot into a usable, accessible and attractive garden by building terraces for the flowers Mary wanted to grow, two lawn areas and several hard-surface areas for entertaining and enjoying the garden, a spacious deck next to the house to integrate the interior and exterior, and even a crow’s nest at the top the property from which the General could enjoy the view of the north Bay and admire his roses.


View of north San Francisco bay from the General's crow's nest.


View of Fay Park today from the crow's nest.

The unique design feature of the garden are the twin gazebos, which are a reference to the castle towers on the logo of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers--General Berrigan was a Division Engineer for the Corps.

The latticed gazebos are an appropriate construction in the foggy city--casting delicate shadows on the ground plane and light silhouettes against the dark green hillside.


Bonanza, October 25, 1959.

Bonanza, October 25, 1959.

Church’s distinctive design reflected his Beaux Arts training, but with a modern interpretation typical of this middle stage in his career. The Berrigan garden is partly symmetrical and partly axial in its layout, but not at the expense of destroying the only significant tree on the site. Church felt it was more important to save a noteworthy tree than to adhere to a strict axis in developing the garden--a lesson he said he learned from Fletcher Steele. The repetition of evergreen hedges, reminiscent of the Italian Rensaissance gardens that he loved, not only gives form to the spaces but also ensures the year round visual appeal of the garden.


Main deck with checkerboard pattern and balustrade.

At the main living level of the house, Church redesigned the existing deck off the sun room and kitchen with a basketweave pattern (the same design was used at the 1948 Donnell garden in Sonoma) that eliminates the linearity inherent in a more typical wood deck and lends an informality to the space. As the sun room opens directly onto the main terrace of the garden, the deck is effectively an extension of the interior living area. This relationship of the indoor-outdoor spaces is a signature design element in Church’s work. To integrate the Edwardian house with the more “modern” garden he designed a classic balustrade--which is repeated at different levels--as the guard rail of the deck and the upstairs porch.


Repeating balustrades (metal railings are new).

View toward house showing upstairs balustrade and Copenhagen street lamp.

Off the west end of the deck, exposed aggregate concrete walks with wood joints emanating from the shape of the lawn panel--a rectangle with mitered corners--define the flower and herb beds for the main level of the garden. Exposed aggregate with wood joints was a favorite paving choice of Church's that has endured in most of his surviving gardens.


In the corners close to the street side, Church specified Pittosporum undulatum standards to help screen the imposing apartment building across the street from view.



Lawn panel with sundial.


Mirroring the Victoria box are two dwarf lemon trees next to the deck--one was existing and Church added the other to balance the composition.


The second tier is composed of three spaces: the central one is formed by a cobblestone wall to retain the specimen pepper tree. Church designed the beds around this area with a semi-circle and preserved the ground under the tree as a flat plane.


California pepper tree in central planting bed.


The central bed is flanked by twin stairs that reinforce axial design. To the west, a series of three terraces for perennials, flowering shrubs and roses was designed using the informal cobblestones to retain the beds perpendicular to the stairway.


West side planting beds.

On the east side, rectangular raised beds for more shade-tolerant plants are parallel to the stairway. The central axis was thereby developed without the usual symmetry of the garden areas on each side of the stairs.


East side planting beds.


To screen the close neighboring house along the east border of the garden, Church planted a hedge of Pittosporum eugenioides (Tarata), while retaining a “palm” tree (actually Dracena draco).


East side with "hedge" now grown as trees and stairway with new railing.


At each end of the sloping bed, he specified Canary Island pines (Pinus canariensis), no longer present. Wide, low-rise steps running parallel to the bed follow the slope of the hill down to the lower garden at the northeast corner of the lot.


Semi-circular planting bed near pepper tree and balustrade at overlook.


The third tier of the upper garden may be reached by either set of stairs leading to another deck, or “overlook” as designated by Church, with several options for dining, entertaining and enjoying the views. A belvedere, with another elegant balustrade, frames this deck in front of the upper lawn panel.


Upper level lawn panel.

The twin gazebos are anchored by four parterres forming a central octagon, with rose standards in beds framed by clipped boxwood hedges.


Boxwood parterres with rose standards.

Floor of gazebo: exposed aggregate hexagon.


The composition of the parterres formed the balanced cross of the axial layout. The Berrigans furnished the belvedere with a dining table and each gazebo sheltered a small table and chairs (see bird's eye view photograph at beginning of article).


The original planting concept included six flowering cherry trees wrapping around the top tier wall as a backdrop, with a location for a figurative sculpture designated, but the trees were apparently not planted as they do not appear in any record photographs of the garden. The emphatic Agapanthus were planted and remain.


Wood seat wall with Agapanthus and Cotoneaster.


Church's plan repeated the Canary Island pines from the east side in two other locations: one on the west side in the second tier and one on the uphill side of the small garage (located at the southwest end of the property).


Crow's nest.


A small stair along the east side of the hill leads to the crow’s nest, which is framed by another balustrade. The rocky slope below is covered with ivy and was to be planted with Aleppo pines (Pinus halepinsis) and Acacia verticillata, selected for their adaptability to poor conditions. Only one out of six specified trees survived to 1997.


To screen the garden from passersby along the street side, Church designated two additional Victorian box (Pittosporum undulatum), duplicating the lower pair, and a hedge of Monterey cypress (Cupressus macrocarpa) which was to be kept at the fence height. The cypress was substituted with Pittosporum crassifolium (Karo). (See bird's eye view photograph at beginning of this article.)


One of the hallmarks of every Church garden is the seamlessness of the circulation. He emphasized the importance of being able to get around and through the entire space. The walkways and stairs not only achieve this but were designed in conjunction with the necessary retaining walls and with a careful attention to the integrity of the design. Each planting bed is easily accessible for viewing and care. The steps adhere to the Church formula for the rise and run relationship, so there is ease in ascending and descending and always a feeling that the stairway, walks and spaces are more than ample.


Pittosporum tobira 'Variegata'

Church chose structural planting to support and complement the existing plants favored by his clients. His selections included Pittopsorum tobira ‘Variegata’ (Variegated Tobira), Pittosporum undulatum, Pittosporum eugenioides, Eugenia myrtifolia (now known as Syzygium paniculatum), Myrtus communis (Myrtle), Buxus microphylla japonica (Japanese boxwood), and Cupressus macrocarpa, mostly planted as hedges and often repeated through the garden to unify it. His palette was typically restrained and provided the backdrop for his clients to select flowering perennials and annuals. The original planting sketch illustrated rose standards in the upper tier parterres and listed rose bush selections for the terraces along the western side, but they were likely Mary’s and included shades of pink, white and lavender flowers (‘Briarley’, ‘Fashionette’, ‘Pink Radiance’, ‘Sterling Silver’, ‘Ivory Fashion’ and ‘Kordes Perfecta’).


Topiaried Hollywood juniper.


As a nod to the formality of the layout, Church often used topiary, particularly at entries. At his own home, not far from here, the opera stairs leading to his front door were flanked by a matched pair of poodle-cut boxwoods. His plan for the Berrigans specified topiaried Hollywood junipers flanking the belvedere (overlook) as well as street side entry to the garden, near the house.


Church’s low-maintenance shrub and perennial choices, most of which also added floral scent and color, included Agapanthus africanus (Lily-of-the-Nile), Escallonia rubra, Camellia, Choisya ternata (Mexican orange), Andromeda (Pieris floribunda), Osmanthus fragrans (Sweet Olive) and Hebe.


Osmanthus fragrans

Syringa x hyacinthiflora


For seasonal color and interest he specified flowering crabapple, purple-leaf plum, flowering cherry, Cotoneaster parneyi, Quince, Lilac and Weigela.


The plantings were carefully staggered with a heirarchy of sizes and forms to maintain a multiplicity of views within and beyond the garden walls. A garden is not stagnant, of course, and over time it evolved. Some plants disappeared and new species were introduced.


Cotoneaster parneyi, Agapanthus and wood seat wall.

Typical of Church’s designs, there are built-in places to sit throughout the garden: all the walls are just the right height for sitting but not so high as to obstruct the view of any of the planting.


Sunburst lights in gazebo.


An early advocator of garden lighting to extend the livability of gardens, Church fitted the gazebos with sunburst light fixtures with multi-colored glass panels and two copper Copenhagen light standards (Church purchased these on a trip to Denmark and used them in selective gardens, including his own, over the latter half of his career) were installed at the base of the stairs on each side of the pepper tree to illuminate the main level of the garden. The garden’s ornamental accoutrements are also representative of Church’s stylistic choices and recommendations, including the Copenhagen lights, a sundial in the center of the lawn panel at the lower level and a figurative sculpture at the base of the hillside as the terminus of the axis of the garden.


The garden was bequeathed to the City of San Francisco by Mary Fay Berrigan and is named for her because the property had been in her family for over 100 years. The first house was built there in 1869 by Mary’s great uncle, David Fay, who made his fortune in soap manufacturing. The second house, which remains, was built in 1912 by Mary’s father, Luke Fay (1961-1933). Mary lived in the house as a child and for the last 35 years of her life. Mary’s bequest intended for the garden to become a park. In 2002, the landscape architectural firm of Royston Hanamoto Alley & Abey along with the San Francisco Recreation & Park Department, prepared a historic assessment report for rehabilitation of the garden, which had suffered from neglect and deferred maintenance. As a city park, the garden had to be adapted for safety and accessibility. Additionally, to maintain the park within budgetary constraints and the capabilities of the SFRPD gardening staff, many of the garden’s original materials and plants were changed and there have been alterations to access and egress points which also slightly altered the circulation through the garden. Visitors to the garden are unaware of the changes because the design character of the garden with its high degree of integrity is intact. True to most of Church’s work, there is a timelessness to the garden which may be its single most identifiable characteristic. It provides a peaceful respite from the hubbub of the city and a glimpse into the remarkable work of this great landscape architect.


Fay Park is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily and is located at 2366 Leavenworth Street, corner of Chestnut, on Russian Hill in San Francisco, California.


Fay Park is maintained by the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department with oversight by the Fay Park Citizens Advisory Committee (composed of 12 members representing various neighborhood associations, a Fay-Berrigan family member, an architect, a landscape architect and a historian). The garden may be rented for events (weddings are the most common)--see the SFRPD website for contact information. The house is available to lease, with a rent-back option for much-needed repair and renovation. Contact Nicholas Kinsey: Nicholas.Kinsey@sfgov.org.


The garden will be featured on The Cultural Landscape Foundation's "What's Out There Weekend" in San Francisco tour September 17-18, guided by yours truly. (http://www.tclf.org)



The Berrigan-Fay garden is also documented in:

Gardens are for People - Second Edition, by Thomas D. Church; Grace Hall and Michael Laurie, editors, 1983, McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York.

Here Today, San Francisco’s Architectural Heritage, by Roger Olmsted and T.H. Watkins, 1969, Chronicle Books, San Francisco, CA.

House Beautiful, June 1960.

Your Private World, by Thomas D. Church, 1969, Chronicle Books, San Francisco, CA.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Les Jardins de Marqueyssac and Boxwood

In a serendipitous sequence of events, boxwood and other topiary have reemerged in the landscape design vocabulary, or, at least my clients are asking for them.


The May/June 2011 issue of Garden Design magazine features an article about topiary that includes some photographs of La Louve in Bonnieux, France, whose current owner I met in 2009 when I toured her and her husband (who owns Clos du Peyronnet in Menton) around some of Thomas Church’s gardens in the San Francisco Bay area. La Louve features a variety of organically sculpted plants that includes santolina, rosemary, lavender, juniper and teucrium, in addition to boxwood, and the shapes are mostly soft and rounded.


Simultaneously, one of my clients gave me an article mainly about boxwood from the New York Times (“Home” section, Thursday, May 19, 2011), which prompted me to order the Boxwood Handbook from the American Boxwood Society so I could learn more about the hundreds of varieties of these versatile plants, as well as how to properly care for them.


Robert Hunter Winery - pool area designed by Thomas Church


Just two weeks ago, my husband and I visited the Robert Hunter Winery in Sonoma to see the Thomas Church garden there and learned about Ann Smith Hunter who has some remarkable specimens of boxwoods she has collected over a lifetime.

Robert Hunter Winery - potted boxwood collection of Ann Hunter

Anyone who studies the work of Thomas Church knows how often he specified boxwood in the gardens he designed. Church’s favorite gardens were Italian Renaissance gardens because of their simplicity, low maintenance, and what he considered their perfect compositions. Church tended to select evergreen plants to anchor his garden designs so they would look well year round, leaving the selection of flowers to his clients. In his writings, he dispelled the notion that clipped parterres were somehow antithetical to his low-maintenance garden intentions, explaining that they required pruning only twice a year to preserve their beauty.

Robert Hunter Winery - entry arbor flanked by boxwood

All of these recent occurences reminded me that I had not gotten around to writing about one of the most extraordinary topiary boxwood gardens I have visited: Les Jardins de Marqueyssac near Vézac, France.


Boxwood topiary at Marqueyssac

We were drawn to this garden by a brochure in the hotel where we stayed in nearby Sarlat. The drive through the river valley, wrapped by rugged limestone hills clothed in evergreen oaks, with the occasional chateau turret or steep-pitched stone roofs peeking through also took us to La Roque-Gageac and Beynac. Marqueyssac is in the path of wine connoisseurs trekking between the Bordeaux and Rhone wine regions as well. The narrow plateau that rises over steep cliffs is an exceptional site with extraordinary gardens, decidedly vaut le détour.


the 17th century Château

The Château was built at the end of the 17th century by Bertrand Vernet de Marqueyssac, Counselor to Louis XIV. In its restored state, it still has the lauze roof (limestone slab).


Lauze roof

17th century wall


The original garden, which is said to have been designed by Porcher--a student of André Le Nôtre--in the mid-18th century, followed the formal tradition of French châteaux, with terraces and allées surrounding the château.


Porcher's geometric parterre below de Cerval's organic boxwood

mature boxwood parterre next to Château

The geometric boxwood terraces on the south and east sides of the château are from Porcher’s era, but little else remains of his work except the structural hardscape elements, which are more than incidental: the fortifications and the stone belvedere which commands a 360º view of the valley.


17th century fortifications by Porcher

Walks along the walls provide views of the valley as well as the cliffside topiary.

stone bench along stone wall overlooking valley

Julien Bessières (Henri Géraud Julien, Chevalier Bessières et de l'Empire) who was the député for the Dordogne in 1827, held the property from 1830 to 1840 and added the Gothic chapel along with a 100 meter long grand allée for horseback riding.


Grand allée

The great transformation of the gardens into the boxwood extravaganza that they are today took place in the 1860s when it was inherited by Julien de Cerval, a magistrate from nearby Sarlat. De Cerval was enamored by Italian gardens from his younger years serving in the military in Italy and wanted to emulate the foothills of the Apennines in his interpretation of the Italianate theme. Initially he built more small buildings evocative of Italian domestic architecture, with loggias and foursquare, pantiled roofs.


pantiled roof on stone building, 1860s

Boxwood hedge and outbuildings dating from 1860s

Cypresses and umbrella pines (Pinus pinea) were brought from Italy to anchor the terraces and shade the four miles of walks he laid out across the 37-acre site. The vegetation on the south face of the plateau is mainly of Mediterranean origin: evergreen and truffle oaks (Quercus ilex and Quercus pubescens), junipers (Juniperus communis) and Montpelier maples (Acer monspessulanum) and umbrella pines; while the north side is mainly deciduous and an overall lighter shade of greens, reminiscent of Le Nôtre’s greatest gardens (think: Versailles): limes (Tilia platyphyllos), hornbeams (Carpinus betulus) and robinias. He planted 150,000 boxwoods (Buxus sempervirens) and pruned them into the rather unusual organic, undulating forms that made the gardens unique.


He also built underground cisterns to hold rain water, adding to the existing ones from the first castle, to ensure ample water for all the trees and box.


De Cerval was a bit of a maniac who spent the last 30 years of his life building the boxwood gardens, with an exuberance for detail and definite purpose in the layout--he intended for visitors to get lost along the tree-enclosed paths so they would be obliged to enjoy the whimsical topiary. His goal was to bring people from all over the world to experience his rhapsody in green.


Unfortunately, despite the efforts of the owners after de Cerval, in the latter half of the 20th century while the château was infrequently occupied, the gardens suffered neglect . Kléber Rossillon (heir to the Schlumberger family fortune--who later lost millions to the Bernie Madoff scheme) acquired the property in the nick of time. Kléber grew up just 3 kilometers from Marqueyssac and was inspired as a child by his parents’ efforts to rescue nearby Château de Castelnaud.


Castelnaud

When he finished his schooling, Kléber took on and successfully restored Castelnaud himself. His success set him on a course of restoration that led to the foundation of the Kléber Rossillon society which restores cultural sites. The aquisition of Marqueyssac in 1996 provided him with a challenging new project which he aimed to complete in a mere year’s time.

Stripping off the overgrowth to uncover the stone walls and paths revealed that the boxwood had grown into trees. Kléber set about restoring the clipped topiary and hedges and planted 3,000 new boxwood plants to fill the gaps.


Unlike Porcher’s terrace d’honneur where the boxwood is pruned into rigidly geometric forms, the soft organic forms of de Cerval’s topiary reflect the undulating contours of the surrounding hills. Except for the naturalized cyclamen (Cyclamen hederifolium) introduced by de Cerval, there are no flowers per se in the garden, but balls of box on stripped trunks that pop above the supple forms, simulate them.


mature box hedges with lollipop topiary

There is but one bank where Kléber pruned the boxwood into rectangular shapes with sharp edges, in strong contrast to the swirls on the adjacent terraces.



Kléber also managed to link the château and the wooded paths to the belvedere with the topiary gardens by planting a serpentine path with santolina and rosemary.



He installed automatic irrigation and built a rivulet that runs from the belvedere, with two cascades, into pools, drawing water from the rainwater cisterns. In keeping with the Italian Renaissance low-maintenance tradition, the gardens are tended by only four gardeners and the boxwood topiaries are pruned by hand twice a year--spring and autumn.


When the work was completed in March 1997, Kléber opened the gardens to the public. Since then they have been designated as one of the “Notable Gardens of France” by the Committee of Parks and Gardens of the Ministry of Culture, a distinction that no doubt would have pleased Julien de Cerval. Work continues in a romantic vein with additions of contemporary sculpture and new arbors.


sculpture by Gérard Chabert

2010 arbor

Les Jardins de Marqueyssac are one of the few attractions in the Dordogne that is open year round. They have special qualities in every season even though the plants are almost exclusively evergreen. In summer, the gardens magically sparkle with candelight on Thursday evenings, much like Villandry and Vaux le Vicomte. Even in winter on a sunlit day it is spectacular to see the gardens appearing to float on a cloud as the mist rises from the river and envelopes the cliff.