Cosmic speculation Park in Scotland .. Stunning capture the eyes of
Garden cosmic speculation found in house Portrak, near Dumfries in "south-west Scotland." It is a private garden created by Charles Jencks, a eminent American architect, who led and developed the theory of postmodernism in contemporary architecture, architectural critic and historian of architecture, and the author of numerous articles and studies, as well as landscape designer. This construction inspired Zhniks from his wife, where in 1988 inherited Jenks of his mother, a piece of land in Scotland. Through forms of garden decided to show the beauty of the universe, from the global to the form of miniature, before turning into a garden speculation cosmic was this land planted with vegetables and berries and they contain several greenhouses. Originated garden when I decided Maggie Keswick and her husband Charles Jenks digging a pond in the garden in 1989, was the use of soil resulting from drilling in the design hills magnificent surroundings, where Maggie expert in parks Chinese, it was natural making statues like Dragon Chinese. and also the garden containing sculptures and statues and decorative metal from the double helix and aircraft, offering a range of values of Marxist dialectics of chaos theory and the structure of DNA, black holes and engineering stereotyped images repeatedly. In the past, parks arise under the influence of literature, and on the contrary, originated this park affected math and science, especially engineering fractal, as we are accustomed to gardening in straight lines and instead was used waves Jenks and sprains up to the wall and pass along the lower part of the ditch and fence gate. Maggie Keswick died in 1995. Despite this, he continued Jenks to develop his ideas about the garden, where he became a mathematical formulas and scientific part combines elegance natural monuments, statues and curves synthetic, where one of the parks unique not only in Scotland but in the whole world. Park is considered one of the private sector, but usually opens in one day every year via "parks" in Scotland and money is collected from the sale of tickets for the Maggie Centre, a cancer care charity.
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