A small collection.
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The delights of Perth City Farm.
Read moreQueensland Architecture Awards
It was an honour to receive the Hayes & Scott Award for Small Project Architecture.
Read moreDesign Class: The Secret to Successful Garden Steps
Two things to consider when planning steps for your garden.
Read moreA Real Jewel in the Crown
10 Hectares of Remnant Bushland at Government House
Government House, or Fernberg, was built 150 years ago, one of the first houses in the Paddington area. In the 1860s it was converted into a grand Italianate mansion, by local architect Richard Gailey. Over the years Fernberg has been extended, and outbuildings added, including stables, guard houses, sheds and pavilions...providing a neat little time capsule of architectural styles.
Fernberg’s grounds cover 14 hectares, and many Brisbaneites are familiar with its presence high above Fernberg Road.
Less well known is that two-thirds of the property is preserved remnant bushland.
Like the entire property, the bushland portion sits over a very shallow layer of soil, with rock below. It is steeply sloping, with a number of gullies.
In the 1920s a number of unsealed ‘Woodland Walks’ were constructed through the grounds. The 250 metre long ‘Jubilee Walk’ was constructed during the term of the current Governor.
Several tree families are commonly found, including Ironbarks (Eucalyptus siderophloia), Spotted Gums (Corymbia citriodora subsp. variegata), Forest Red Gums (Eucalyptus tereticornis), and Brush Box (Lophostemon confertus).
The Jubilee Walk links a pair of ponds constructed in the 1990s as examples of the ‘bush style’ of Australian gardening. They were intended to reflect an awareness of ecological and environmental issues, and they provide habitat for a variety of native animals.
As the walk takes you closer back to the house more constructed elements appear, including stone retaining walls.
From there it is into the formal gardens, which we will visit in another story soon.
Government House is at 168 Fernberg Road, Paddington. Details of Open House and Garden days are posted on the website, along with more information about the history of Fernberg.
Grounds: Cafe Gardens & Garden Cafes
Engine Room Cafe
With a long weekend coming up, it’s time to start planning the all-important city exodus. Why not turn your thoughts to a scenic trip through the Lockyer Valley and up over the range to Toowoomba?
Beat the Carnival of Flowers crowds by going at this time of year, and if you do, consider popping in to the Engine Room Café. No matter what you select from the menu it will tide you over for a good week or two – exactly what is required from a day-trip pit stop!
The best place to sit is the courtyard out the back…it’s not obvious at first glance, but well worth backtracking from the counter, through the gift shop, and up the stairs to sit out and enjoy the winter sun.
There’s a simple timber frame structure overhead and the floor is a mix of deck and old concrete. I was most intrigued though, by the walls.
A simple and fairly cost-effective series of ‘green walls’ has been created by wrapping the courtyard in curving panels of reinforcing mesh.
El-cheapo brush fencing panels are secured front and back…
…and a healthy profusion of vegetation bursts through beneath the dappled light.
Amongst the stars are maidenhair ferns, and a host of bromeliads.
Adding colour are a bougainvillea and a native violet that’s hurled itself around the base of the screens and up the front like a rat up a drainpipe.
Being disinclined to deconstruct the courtyard I wasn’t able to see what was going on behind the screens, but I imagine the pots and growing media are all back there, hanging from the reo mesh.
If you’ve read the story on Chicago’s Garfield Park Conservatory City Garden you’ll know of my fondness for garden structures made from reinforcing bars and mesh.
I reckon the Engine Room Café shows another way to use this readily available and versatile material to good effect.
Now tell me what you think? Do you like the contrast between the rusty reinforcing mesh and the verdant greenery?
Let me know in the comments below.
Happy Long-Weekend-Planning, and see you soon for more from the world of landscape and design.
Note: the Engine Room Cafe is at 1 Railway Street, Toowoomba.