In this garden close to Lausanne in Switzerland, Russell Page overcame the difficulties of an uneven site, and oversaw the planting of a variety of trees including Beech and Japanese Cedars.
Property of Leonidas Goulandris, Chemin de Champvent, 1008, Jouxtens-Mézery, Lausanne, Switzerland
1971 to 1972
Archive of Garden Design Ref: RP/1/13/18
In the early 1970s, Russell Page designed gardens for twin brothers Leonidas and Alexandros Goulandris at their homes in Jouxtens-Mézery, a district of Lausanne. In unpublished notes, Page summed up the gardens succinctly and somewhat dismissively:
Two gardens at Lausanne. Impossible sites involving unnecessary gymnastics. Basic tree planting. An afternoon drinking white wine to persuade an old gardener to fell 1 tulip tree.
The plans for Leonidas Goulandris’ property, however, suggest that the design work went beyond mere tree planting. At the centre of the property was a U-shaped house, with a courtyard area to the front. A terrace sat at the rear, with a lawn leading away from it, towards a wilder ‘prairie’ garden beyond (see RP/1/13/18/8).
The contour lines marked on some of the drawings do suggest, as Page implied, that the uneven terrain was tricky to work with. This may have been the reason behind planting so much of the property with trees. Wooded areas, many of them filled with Beech (‘bois de hêtre’ on the plans), enclosed the house, and the gardens close to it. Other trees suggested included Pinus nigra, Pinus sylvestris, Japanese cedars and Tsuga heterophylla (see RP/1/13/18/7).
Several of the drawings relate to the garden area behind the house, where a wide terrace led down to a rectangular lawn flanked by flowerbeds. At first, Page suggested a formal structure but this evolved into a more relaxed, fluid planting arrangement (see RP/1/13/18/6; RP/1/13/18/9; RP/1/13/18/11; RP/1/13/18/12; RP/1/13/18/13; and RP/1/13/18/14).
There is nothing in the Russell Page archive to suggest how the commission came about. Leonidas and Alexandros, with their brother, ran the family business, one of the largest shipping companies in the world: N. J. Goulandris. The eminent Goulandris family had strong ties with Switzerland; the renowned art collector Basil Goulandris (cousin of Leonidas and Alexandros) had had a house at Jouxtens-Mézery in the 1960s (he subsequently moved to Gstaad).
As Page recounted in The Education of a Gardener, he first went to Switzerland after the Second World War, designing a garden overlooking the lake near Geneva. It was a place where he greatly enjoyed working:
I learned on this trial run in Switzerland with what care the Swiss construct and maintain their gardens. After the war years of doing without, it was an eye opener to see work so meticulously executed. The cost was and still is tremendously high, but you can count on first-class workmanship. Holes for plants are dug well and deep enough, there is no stinting of peat or manure, and you can choose all the large specimen shrubs you need from nurseries that are well stocked and well cultivated. Stone masons make a fine, exact job of paving and steps, paths are properly laid (274).
Over the years, Page created several gardens in Switzerland, many of which presented quite particular challenges. For Prince Aly Khan, the need to create privacy from news reporters was paramount. At Creux de Genthod, probably his most significant commission in Switzerland, he needed to link two levels which had hitherto been separated by a grassy mound (the staircase devised as the solution is possibly the most elegant which Page designed). Page faced similar problems at Schloss Freudenberg, a 1930s château on the Lake of Zug, south of Zurich; here, a lower terrace was added to soften the descent from the main terrace to an apple orchard below. There are no plans for these projects in the Russell Page archive but photographs of Creux de Genthod and Schloss Freudenberg do provide a hint of Page’s designs for these gardens.
Literature
Page, Russell. Unpublished notes, undated [1970s?] (Archive of Garden Design RP/3/1/5(3 of 11)).
— The Education of a Gardener. Harvill, 1994.
van Zuylen, Gabrielle and Marina Schinz. The Gardens of Russell Page. Frances Lincoln Ltd, 2008.
Related material in the Archive of Garden Design
RP/1/13/17: Alexandre Goulandris, Jouxtens-Mézery, Lausanne, 1970-1973
RP/4/3/34: Three black-and-white photographs, Creux de Genthod, Switzerland
RP/4/3/31: Colour photograph, Schloss Freudenberg, Switzerland
RP/4/3/44: Two colour photographs, Schloss Freudenberg, Switzerland[?]