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  Main Library Landscaping Guide 
The outdoor spaces and landscape design at the new Santa Monica Public Library are an extension of the architecture, created by Moore Ruble & Yudell. 

Landscape architects Pamela Burton & Company employ the metaphor “bringing light to the world beneath the surface.”  The metaphor plays on Santa Monica as a city by the bay and the Library as a revealer of the depths of human knowledge and cultures.

The Library's interior spaces are woven together with a series of courtyards that are fully integrated with the building.  The ocean is represented through the use of recycled seashells and blue glass incorporated in the paving that connects the courtyard and the crescent-shaped water feature.

Artist Carl Cheng's 'Underwater Canopy' is a thirty-foot, round canopy that arises from the cafe and projects seaweed and sea life shadows on the ground of the courtyard.  The landscaping planting palette mimics a marine landscape and the hardscape materials recall underwater topography. 

We invite visitors to explore our courtyards and gardens, their plantings, and their sustainable features that contributed to the Main Library
obtaining a prestigious Leadership in Energy and Environment Design (LEED) Gold rating through the U.S. Green Building Council.

Central Courtyard Seventh Street Entrance
Reception Courtyard Children's Garden
Santa Monica Boulevard Fiction Garden
North Entry Courtyard Sixth Street
Parking Garden Seventh Street
Museum Garden Street Trees

Library Landscaping Map

Click thumbnails for high resolution photographs

 Central Courtyard 

The Central Courtyard is visible from both floors of the Library. Its design and plantings welcome people into a lush space marked by contrasting colors and textures. Plantings include the Red Yucca (Hesperaloe parviflora) and the native Dudleya paucifolia (no common name).  Dragon Trees (Dracaena draco) and Mediterranean Fan Palms (Chamaerops humilis) add height and shade to this serene space.

Acacia stenophylla
Shoestring Acacia

Aeonium ‘Mixed Green’
No Common Name (NCN)

Agave attenuata
Century Plant

Agave parryi huachucensis
NCN

Chamaerops humilis
Mediterranean Fan Palm

Clivia miniata ‘French Hybrid’
Kaffir Lily

Clivia miniata
‘San Marcos Yellow’  

Dracaena draco
Dragon Tree

Dudleya paucifolia
NCN

Echeveria x imbricata
Hen and Chicks

Hesperaloe parviflora
Red Yucca

Kalanchoe beharensis
Felt Plant

Phormium tenax
‘Jack Spratt Flax’

Sedum spathulifolium
‘Cape Blanco’ Sedum

 

Senecio mandraliscae
Blue Stalk Sticks

 
 
 Reception Courtyard

People gathering for events in the Martin Luther King Jr. Auditorium are treated to a variety of sustainable plantings in raised concrete planters in the North Reception Courtyard.  This partially open-air Courtyard features the Shoestring Acacia tree (Acacia stenophylla) and a variety of plants including Blue Stalk Sticks (Senecio mandraliscae ) and Hen and Chicks (Echeveria x imbricata).  The North Reception Courtyard provides access to the paseo, a covered passageway that connects the eastern and western portions of the Library.

Acacia stenophylla 
Shoestring Acacia

Aeonium ‘Mixed Green’ 
No Common Name (NCN)

Agave attenuata 
Century Plant

Echeveria x imbricata 
Hen and Chicks

Kalanchoe beharensis 
Felt Plant

Senecio mandraliscae 
Blue Stalk Sticks

 
 Santa Monica Boulevard

Set back from a busy thoroughfare, this entry courtyard, with its series of raised planters, serves as a gathering place or as a waiting area. A wide variety of Aloes, accented by the Century Plant (Agave attenuata), are represented. California Fan Palms (Washingtonia filifera) in the planters and Chinese Flame Trees (Koelreuteria  bipinnata) along Santa Monica Boulevard add a vertical dimension to the plantings in this area.

Agave attenuata  
Century Plant

Aloe brevifolia   
 No Common Name (NCN)

Aloe saponaria    
Soap Aloe

Aloe striata
Coral Aloe

Beaucarnea recurvata  
Ponytail Palm

Koelreuteria bipinnata  
Chinese Flame Tree   

Phormium tenax 
‘Bronze Baby’

Rosmarinus officinalis ‘Prostratus’   Rosemary

 

Washingtonia filifera  
California Fan Palm

 
 
 North Entry Courtyard

Concrete planters and four varieties of flax, including Yellow Wave Flax (Phorumium tenax hybrid) and Jack Spratt Flax (Phormium tenax), border the Sixth Street entry to the Library and the Martin Luther King Jr. Auditorium.  The space, which includes California Pepper Trees (Schinus molle) and California Fan Palms (Washingtonia filifera), is fully integrated with the Parking Garden.

Ceanothus griseus horizontalis
‘Yankee Point’ California Lilac

Lantana ‘Compacta’ 
Shrub Verbana

Lantana ‘Gold Rush’
No Common Name (NCN)
Mahonia repens  
Creeping Mahonia

Mrytus communis ‘Compacta’  
Dwarf Myrtle

Phormium tenax 
‘Bronze Baby’ 

Phormium  tenax hybrid  
‘Yellow Wave Flax’

Phormium tenax 
‘Jack Spratt Flax’

Phormium tenax hybrid 
‘Maori Maiden’

Schinus molle  
California Pepper Tree

 
Washingtonia filifera  
California Fan Palm
 
 
 Parking Garden

The Parking Garden features a grove of California Pepper Trees (Schinus molle) and 35 Mexican Fan Palms (Washingtonia robusta). These palms were moved during the construction of the Main Library and then replanted on the site as part of the sustainable landscape program. Drought tolerant shrubs at the base of the trees are fragrant and colorful.  The impact of storm water runoff is reduced by the absence of curbs surrounding the planting areas that encourages drainage from the parking lot into the planters.  Texas Needle Grass (Nasella tenuissima) on either end of the Garden moves gracefully in the ocean breeze.

Agave attenuata  
Century Plant  

Agave parryi huachucensis  
No Common Name (NCN)

Carissa macrocarpa  
Natal Plum

Ceanothus griseus horizontalis   
‘Yankee Point’ California Lilac

Myrtus communis ‘Compacta’  
Dwarf Myrtle

Nasella tenuissima  
Texas Needle Grass

Salvia clevelandii  
Cleveland Sage

Schinus molle  
California Pepper Tree

Washingtonia filifera
California Fan Palm

Washingtonia robusta   
Mexican Fan Palm

 
 Museum Garden/Seventh Street Entrance

Plants with a yellow theme set against a dramatic blue wall enclose the Museum Garden space, making it an extension of the future home of the Santa Monica Historical Museum, as well as a potential gathering space.   Foliage includes Jerusalem Sage (Phlomis fruticosa), Yellow Torch Aloe (Aloe arborescens ‘Lutea’), and Torch Lily (Kniphofia hybrids ‘Yellow’) and Dragon Trees (Dracaena draco).

Agave attenuata  
Century Plant  

Aloe arborescens ‘Lutea’  
Yellow Torch Aloe

Dracaena draco  
Dragon Tree

Kniphofia hybrids ‘Yellow’   
Torch Lily

Nasella tenuissima 
Texas Needle Grass

Phlomis fruticosa   
Jerusalem Sage

 

Schinus molle  
California Pepper Tree

 
 
 Children's Garden

The Children’s Garden has a whimsical layout and is ideal for toddlers taking their first steps with a parent in tow. Placed just outside the Parenting Collection in the Children’s Room, this intimate Garden features an earthen cone planted with Nana Mondo Grass (Ophiopogon japonicus ‘Nana’) and edged by a path ending in Pony Tail Palms (Beaucarnea recurvata). Snail Vine (Vigna caracalla) creeps up the steel screen in this garden.

Acorus gramineus ‘Ogon’  
Japanese Sweet Flag

Bambusa multiplex  
Alphonse Karr Bamboo

Beaucarnea recurvata
Ponytail Palm

Ficus pumila
Creeping Fig

Ophiopogon japonicus ‘Nana’
Nana Mondo Grass

Vigna caracalla  
Snail Vine

 
 Fiction Garden

The first floor fiction collection looks out onto a small garden area; a fence screens the area off from the Sixth Street sidewalk. Here, the Century Plant (Agave attenuata) and two varieties of Heavenly Bamboo (Nandina domestica ‘Harbour Dwarf’ and ‘Compacta’) are set in a mulch bed of gravel and bark. (Please note: the Fiction Garden is not accessible to the public except when used as an emergency exit to evacuate the Library.)

Agave attenuata
Century Plant

Nandina domestica
‘Harbour Dwarf’ Heavenly Bamboo

 

Nandina domestica
‘Compacta’ Heavenly Bamboo

 
 
 Sixth Street
 

Agave attenuata
Century Plant

Aloe brevifolia   
No Common Name (NCN)

Aloe saponaria   
Soap Aloe

Aloe striata  
Coral Aloe

Convolvulus mauritanicus  
Ground Morning Glory

Dymondia margaretae  
Silver Carpet

Phormium tenax 
‘Bronze Baby’
Rosmarinus officinalis ‘Prostratus’   Rosemary
 
 Seventh Street
 

Agave attenuata  
Century Plant

Aloe brevifolia
No Common Name (NCN)

Aloe saponaria
Soap Aloe

Aloe striata
Coral Aloe

Convolvulus mauritanicus  
Ground Morning Glory

Dymondia margaretae  
Silver Carpet

Phormium tenax 
‘Bronze Baby’

Rosmarinus officinalis ‘Prostratus’  
Rosemary
 
 Street Trees

The Library is surrounded by a variety of street trees that complement the landscaping.  As part of the Downtown Transit Mall Project, all existing trees along Santa Monica Boulevard have been replaced by Chinese Flame trees (Koelreuteria  bipinnata).  Fern Pine trees (Podopcarpus gracilior) are featured on Seventh Street; and Carrot Wood trees (Cupaniopsis anacardiodes) are the dominant species on Sixth Street.
 

Cupaniopsis anacardioides
Carrot Wood

Koelreuteria bipinnata
Chinese Flame Tree 

 

Podocarpus gracilior
Fern Pine

 

 Library Landscaping Map (click map to enlarge)

Thanks to landscape architects Pamela Burton & Company,
and volunteer Sally Ashear.

 

 

 

This page was last modified on 09/09/2008

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