March 21, 2006 (Raleigh, NC) — “Our homes often reflect a particular view of our place in the continuum between the built environment and world of nature,” writes bestselling author Sarah Susanka in Outside The Not So Big House, the newest addition to her popular collection of The Not So Big House books which she co-wrote with noted landscape designer Julie Moir Messervy. In fact, this observation opens a 10-page section of the book devoted to the garden design by Raleigh landscape architect Judy Harmon, ASLA, for the house she shares with her husband, architect Frank Harmon, FAIA.
New to bookstores from Taunton Press, Outside The Not So Big House combines Susanka’s and Messervy’s talents to show readers “how to bring house and garden into perfect harmony.”
Judy Harmon’s section, entitled “The Attraction of Opposites,” demonstrates, through study and lush photography by Grey Crawford, a garden “designed to mirror and attract oppositions between inside and out, hard and soft, light and dark, and private and public.” The authors discuss how Harmon subdivided her property into “ a series of outdoor rooms with different uses, sizes, shapes, furniture, and plantings” to make the grounds as inhabitable as the different rooms in the house. The last page of the section focuses on details of the landscape design, including simple organic forms, the oval lawn, outdoor accessories, and complementary hues.
“When a husband and wife are also architect and landscape architect,” Susanka writes, “there’s a wonderful alchemy that takes place, as can be seen in this home – a perfect integration of landscape and building.”
Besides Harmon’s work, the book includes 24 other homes and gardens from across the country that the authors feel illustrate their design ideas.
The Harmons’ award-winning house (completed in 1994) and gardens are located off Brooks Avenue near N.C. State University and can also be seen on Frank Harmon’s website, www.frankharmon.com (click on “projects” then “Harmon Residence”). Outside The Not So Big House is available wherever books are sold.