Travis Ward Horticulture

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Toyota Headquarters

November 08, 2017 by Travis Ward in Design

North of Dallas in the suburb of Plano there has been an explosion of corporate development known as Legacy. Mid-rise office buildings and company headquarters relocation has led to massive construction projects. Toyota's $350 million US headquarters project is not an exception. The buildings are designed by Dallas-based firm Corgan and the grounds are designed by the Office of James Burnett, the same mastermind behind the highly-lauded Klyde Warren Park in downtown Dallas. 

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November 08, 2017 /Travis Ward
Toyota Headquarters, Plano, Texas, corporate campus, Legacy Plano, Corgan, Office of James Burnett, Klyde Warren Park, LEED, Achillea millefolium, Lagerstroemia, Yarrow, Moonshine Yarrow, Crape Myrtle, Rudbeckia hirta, Black Eyed Susan, Muhlenbergia capillaris, Gulf Muhly Grass, Stipa tenuissima, Mexican Feathergrass, Anisacanthus quadrifidus wrightii, Hummingbird Bush, Leuders, Bouteloua gracilis, Blonde Ambition, Blue Grama, White Cloud Gulf Muhly, Schizachyrium scoparium, Little Bluestem, Chasmanthium latifolium, Inland Seaoats, Perovskia atriplicifolia, Russian Sage, Panicum, Switchgrass, Heuchera, Coral Bells, Carex divulsa, Berkeley Sedge, Sedge grass, Gaura, Trachelospermum asiaticum, Asian Jasmine, Dryopteris ludoviciana, Southern Wood Fern, living wall, rooftop garden, courtyard, permeable paving, LEED Platinum, native plants, low impact design
Design
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Spring Creek

August 11, 2015 by Travis Ward in Plant Hunt

Along Spring Creek, near the intersection of State Highway 190 and US Highway 75 in Collin County, Texas, there is the Spring Creek Nature Area, a section of land set aside by the City of Richardson for public recreation. One would never guess from these photos that this area is bounded by 8-lane highways and mid-rise office buildings. There is a lot of value in these 100 acres, both economically and ecologically. Many Texas native plants call this area home, despite the surrounding decimation. And in a plot-twist at the end of this post, one will see early pioneers called this area home, as well.

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August 11, 2015 /Travis Ward
Spring Creek, Spring Creek Nature Area, Richardson, Texas, Dallas, Collin County, Liatris, punctata, mucronata, Gayfeather, Texas Gayfeather, Rhus, aromatica, Sumac, Dalea, multiflora, White Prairie Clover, Ilex, decidua, Possumhaw, Holly, Bouteloua, curtipendula, Sideoats Grama, Heliotropium, tenellum, Heliotrope, Amphiachyris, dracunculoides, Broomweed, Bothriochloa, laguroides, Silver Bluestem, Bluestem, Vinca major, Vinca, Invasive, Native plants, Texas native plants, Rivina, humilis, Pigeonberry, Gleditsia, triacanthos, Honeylocust, Erigeron, strigosus, Fleabane, Vernonia, baldwinii, Ironweed, Symphyotrichum, drummondii, texanum, Texas Aster, Aster, Setaria, scheelei, Bristlegrass, Chasmanthium, latifolium, Inland Seaoats, Opuntia, engelmannii, linguiformis, Cow's Tongue Prickly Pear, Prickly Pear, Cactus, Mushroom, gracilis, Blue Grama, Grama, Centaurea, americana, Basketflower, Scabiosa, atropurpurea, Pincushion, Lindheimera, texana, Texas Yellowstar, Asclepias, viridiflora, Green Comet Milkweed, Routh Cemetery, Jacob Routh, Robert Campbell
Plant Hunt
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