Sylvia Crowe
Dame Sylvia Crowe, DBE (15 September 1901 – 30 June 1997)[1] was a British landscape architect and garden designer.[2][3]
Born in Banbury, Oxfordshire, but spent her childhood in Felbridge, Sussex, and trained under Madeline Agar at Swanley College (later absorbed into Hadlow College, which continues to teach University of Greenwich courses in garden design). She was President of the Institute of Landscape Architects (later the Landscape Institute) from 1957 to 1959 and made important contributions to landscape planning for new towns, roads, forestry and the landscape of power. Among her notable projects is the roof garden for the Scottish Widows building in Edinburgh, implemented using native Scottish plants.
In the mid-20th century [Lower Lower Soughton Hall] at Northop in Flintshire belonged to the Gray family. In 1972 Stephen Alexander Reith Gray was Flintshire High Sheriff and Chief Executive of Shotton Steelworks. He commissioned Dame Sylvia Crowe and Raymond Cutbush to redesign the gardens and they remain much as they look today, with formal and informal features which includes herbaceous borders, yew hedges and island beds with mixed planting.
References
- ↑ "Dame Sylvia Crowe". The Times (London). 10 July 1997. p. 25 – via The Times Digital Archive 1785–2008.
- ↑ "BBC - Gardening - Design - Modern". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 October 2008.
- ↑ Hal Moggridge, ‘Crowe, Dame Sylvia (1901–1997)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 8 October 2010
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