Sustainable Sites Approach: Ann Kearsley Design
Pay attention. Start by noticing. Start with the land, with the field; start with that drift of milkweed, monarch magnet; with the flattened grass ovals of deer beds; start with the lupine near the ledge outcrop, protected from the bush hog blades by the jagged stone or maybe by the mower’s annual remembering, his choosing to turn wide around that small blue stand of Maine wildflower; start with those two sentinel apple trees, remnant of an orchard row, traces of other, earlier, hands on the land. Or start with the collapsing stonewalls bounding the field, the ashes and maples and shadblow growing up through those tumbled lines, widening trunks dismantling over generations the carefully stacked harvest of winter frosts and spring plows. Evidence of habitation: who’s been here, who’s here now. Evidence of labor: landform expressing technology and intention and, when the work stops, wildlife’s swift re-occupation. Move. Follow the paths that rainwater takes through the field towards the woods at the bottom of the slope. Feel the topography in your gait, long strides through tall grass on shallow slopes, small stumbles when knees soften in low spots, eddies of sedges marking depressions and swales where water is held longer, draining slowly into the soil. At the edge of the woods turn around, look back up the slope to where you started, eyes now level with the road, body a register of distance and the change in elevation. Circle the field, inscribing a path, feeling for that restful place between edge and open where structure can engage transition. We’re introducing a building into the continuum of occupation and life on the site and, in doing so, will redirect the course of habitation and the character of this place. Our choices about where to build and how to build will determine whether any of the present inhabitants continue to make this landscape their home and whether occasional visitors might be tempted to settle down. And, as every property is part of a much larger, regional ecological matrix, our actions will also precipitate changes in the surrounding area, the impact of our presence rippling out beyond the site boundary. Our first engagement with the site’s ecology, that complex web of relationships among plants, animals, soil, sun and water, will cause disruption and dislocation. Construction takes up space, casting shadows, interrupting water flow, and obstructing movement. We plan the construction staging to reduce this disruption, limiting crews and equipment to a small area immediately around the structure. Topsoil is removed from the building site, stockpiled in low berms, overseeded with a cover crop and kept healthy until we can re-place it around the house next spring. The site drainage pattern is reconfigured so water moves around the building and is reconnected with the existing flow in undisturbed areas downslope. We work to anticipate the site’s response to disturbance, integrating new development with existing conditions and creating opportunities to enrich and expand the ecological health and function of this landscape. Ann Kearsley RLA, MLAUD www.annkearsley.com You can read more blog posts about the GO Home here.