AWARDS, PRESS AND HONORS
2011 Landscape featured on
Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center's Garden Tour
2011 Landscape used as a set in The Tree of Life movie, starring Brad Pitt & Sean Penn
2010 Landscape featured on AIA-Austin Home Tour
2010 Garden in book Tomorrow's Garden by Stephen Orr, garden editor of Martha Stewart magazine
2009 Featured on Central Texas Gardener, KLRU-PBS
2009 Landscape featured in Austin Monthly Home magazine
2008 Landscape featured on Garden Conservancy Tour
2007 Landscape featured in Tribeza Magazine
2006 Landscape/house featured in Home Magazine
2006 Courtyard redesign on AIA-Austin Homes Tour
2005 Featured in Austin American-Statesman article for Taniguchi Garden
2005 Member, Committee for Revitalization of Taniguchi Japanese Garden
2005 Filmed for Landscapers Challenge, HGTV
2005 Garden on CCMC Garden Tour
2004 Green Garden Award, City of Austin
2004 Landscape on AIA-Austin homes tour
1995 Featured in Southern Accents magazine, stained concrete
1994 Featured in Metropolis Magazine for Buzz Design
1994 Winner, Best of Austin, Austin Chronicle, Best Stained Concrete
1993 Honorable Mention, Metropolitan Home, Met Home of the Year Contest
1991 Winner, Best Furniture Design, State of Louisiana AIA-ASID-ASLA
Youtube.com: 2009 Central Texas Gardener
Jan 24, 2009 - Central Texas Gardener
Robert Leeper Landscaping and Gardeing Designs
Less is more: less watering, less lawn and less work
By Joshunda Sanders AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Published: 10:09 p.m. Friday, Sept. 9, 2011
It's possible you're one of those optimists who still actually waters your lawn. This story is not for you. The summer has battered the spirits of some Central Texas gardeners to the extent that they have been calling in experts like Robert Leeper, a local landscape designer and builder, to just dig up the water-sucking grass and start over.
The never-ending summer heat has given Leeper's landscape business a boost, and not just because more people are choosing xeriscaping and lower-maintenance outdoor living spaces over high water bills.
Leeper sent along some ideas for how gardeners can save their sanity and maybe save a little on water bills by replacing some, if not all, of their lawn space.
Reduce (or eliminate) the lawn. "The less lawn, the less water and money," Leeper said.
"Instead of cranking up the old lawn mower, you can spend time with a pair of pruning shears, a good pair of gloves and lots of compost and mulch. It's called gardening — which most people are terrified of, but is really quite easy and enjoyable, once you get the hang of it."
He suggests looking for local classes on reducing lawn spaces at local nurseries or the Austin Museum of Art's Laguna Gloria art school.
Increase your bed space. Planting beds are often 3-foot narrow strips right up against a house, but Leeper said his designs are 6 to 8 feet wide to provide ample growing space for plants from the City of Austin's list of varieties that thrive locally.
Be sure to include at least 60 percent evergreen plants and perennials, or your beds will look bare and empty during the winter.
Create more outdoor living space. Leeper says this is the greatest trend in contemporary American landscape design. Think patio, but bigger. It allows homeowners to add substantial square footage to their living space.
Instead of going crazy with a big slab of concrete, Leeper suggests using gravel or pavers so that homeowners don't end up increasing their impermeable surfaces to create more runoff when it finally rains again.
Know what local plants will thrive here and which ones won't. In addition to getting to know the City of Austin plant list, Leeper says the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, which he says has led the charge for native and well-adapted plants is a great resource for ideas and plants.
Learn some new ways to water. "You don't have to buy a sprinkler system if you don't want, or can't afford to," Leeper said. "Our company has installed several low-tech systems from big-box stores to get our landscapes established ... They aren't perfect, but they can be very practical and efficient, delivering tiny life-saving drops of water to each individual plants via micro-emitters, which have replaced the 'spray every square inch with hundreds of gallons' systems of past century.
"Traditional sprinkler systems can be adapted to have micro-emitters also, but there is something about turning that timer on when it's your day to water. You get in sync with your landscape, instead of expecting it to magically take care of itself."
Get professional help. Leeper advises homeowners to get some help from landscape experts to keep them from wasting money on the wrong plants but also to help translate what the homeowner wants for their landscape into reality with less effort.
"I've learned to translate 'orderly, inviting and alive' into a large entertaining space with simple hedges of Texas mountain laurels, a Mexican sycamore that will shade the picnic table, and a few easy-to-care-for pots," Leeper said.
"Many landscape experts and local garden centers offer consultations by the hour to help you map out your ideas, figure out spaces and make wise plant choices."
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; 445-3630
Tribeza Magazine Cover - 2007
Tribeza 2007 pg.1
Frontyard modern landscape and garden design
Tribeza 2007 p. 2
Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
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Modern landscape and home remodel in Austin
Austin Monthly Home Magazine Cover - 2009
Austin Monthly Home Magazine Courtyard Design Article - 2009.