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Texas Tapestry
Landscape architect James David blends eclectic global influences with native plantings in his lush Austin garden
Quince trees in boxwood parterres line a limestone walkway leading to the great lawn of hardy Bermuda grass.
A dramatic limestone staircase, bisected by a runnel, trickles water from a cistern down to the pond, a home for water lilies, lotuses, frogs, and koi.
by Mimi Read
Photos by Roger Foley


Off a highway outside of downtown Austin, James David stands in his sunbaked garden, which is surprisingly green for the end of summer. In front of his weathered stucco house, there's a dense bed of plants and trees -- a free-form composition with boulders, pots, and raked pea gravel.

David bends over his favorite perennials, pointing out a flowering shrub called Barbados pride and a 'Grace' smoke tree with bronzy foliage.

He knows all the plants' scientific names, origins, and habits. "I kill more than I grow," he smiles. "But I'm a gardener. This is normal to me. You just keep trying."

Austin's premier landscape architect, David is a keen plantsman. But he is also a brilliant garden maker and connoisseur of design, regardless of whether it comes from 17th-century France or 21st-century America.

He may have staked his claim in Austin, but when it comes to collecting the best in garden furniture, ornaments, pots, and oddments, his ear is to the ground of the world.

He selects such things for his own house and garden -- and he sells them at Gardens, his combination nursery, retail shop, and landscape architecture firm that's been part of Austin's creative scene for 24 years.

The garden has been a project ever since David and Gary Peese built their house 27 years ago.

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