Oehme, van Sweden & Associates
Wolfgang Oehme
James van Sweden
“This wedding of house and land,” van Sweden wrote: “… is one of the happiest and most harmonious I have ever achieved.” The chief work on this 1920s stone and shingle house set amid nine acres included the creation of individual garden rooms off the kitchen, dining, and living rooms. “By associating indoor spaces with outdoor space of a related purpose and architectural style, I could practically erase the distinction between house and garden.”[1]
I decided to present [my clients] with a New World interpretation of the [English] cottage gardens they had enjoyed during trips across the Atlantic. [2]
The Artful Garden. see resources
[1] James Van Sweden, Architecture in the Garden (New York: Random House, 2002), 51-57.
[2] Ibid, 54.