Photo, Print, Drawing Sunset Magazine Demonstration Desert Garden, 2021 North Kinney Road, Tucson, Pima County, AZ Sunset Garden
About this Item
Title
- Sunset Magazine Demonstration Desert Garden, 2021 North Kinney Road, Tucson, Pima County, AZ
Other Title
- Sunset Garden
Names
- Historic American Landscapes Survey, creator
- Greene, Guy
- Sunset Magazine
- Arizona Sonora Desert Museum
- Jones, Warren
- Stevens, Chris, transmitter
- Erickson, Helen, editor
- Dowd, Alice, researcher
- Kremer, Austin, researcher
- Henry, Jim, researcher
- Vargas, Gerardine, photographer
- Ignacio, Jude, photographer
- Ignacio, Jude
Created / Published
- Documentation compiled after 2000
Headings
- - desert gardens
- - botanical gardens
- - ramps
- - stairways
- - fountains
- - ponds
- - paths
- - landscapes
- - brickwork
- - brick walls
- - experimental gardens
- - stonework
- - cacti
- - Arizona -- Pima County -- Tucson
Latitude / Longitude
- 32.242814,-111.166717
Notes
- - Entry 2015 HALS Challenge: Documenting Modernist Landscapes
- - Significance: The Sunset Magazine Demonstration Desert Garden (Sunset Garden) was envisioned as an experiment to explore the design and practicable possibilities of using native plants in a contemporary home setting. At the time it was constructed, most southwestern gardens mimicked those of the eastern United States. The imported style often included water-intensive vegetation and green lawns. The goal of the Sunset Garden was to illustrate how xeric native plants could be used to create a regionally appropriate outdoor space. It also served as a testing area for plants not yet commonly used in Southwestern landscaping. As a result of its success, Arizona nurseries began to produce native plant species for home gardens. The Sunset Garden is part of a larger post World War II cultural phenomenon of magazine-sponsored design, of which the Case Study houses sponsored by Arts and Architecture Magazine are perhaps the best known. Noted architects and landscape architects created model houses and gardens that were to serve as models for the general public. Tucson landscape architect Guy Greene, whose work was featured in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Architectural Record, and Time-Life books, as well as in Sunset Magazine, designed the garden. It was completed in three sections, in 1963, 1969 and 1972.
- - Survey number: HALS AZ-18
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1963 Initial Construction
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1969 Subsequent Work
- - Building/structure dates: ca. 1972 Subsequent Work
Medium
- Data Page(s): 19
Call Number/Physical Location
- HALS AZ-18
Source Collection
- Historic American Landscapes Survey (Library of Congress)
Repository
- Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Control Number
- az0663
Rights Advisory
- No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. https://aj.sunback.homes/rr/print/res/114_habs.html
Online Format
Part of
Format
Contributor
- Arizona Sonora Desert Museum
- Dowd, Alice
- Erickson, Helen
- Greene, Guy
- Henry, Jim
- Historic American Landscapes Survey
- Ignacio, Jude
- Jones, Warren
- Kremer, Austin
- Stevens, Chris
- Sunset Magazine
- Vargas, Gerardine