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Skate Strip Juniper Ren Work

Consider a modern home in Austin, Texas. The driveway is a 40-foot long polished concrete slab. Instead of a boring grass strip, the architect specs Skate Strip Juniper Ren Work.

The result is a living line of soft, evergreen texture running parallel to the stark geometry of the concrete. When viewed from the street, the eye follows the continuous line (the "skate strip") seamlessly. The juniper provides a sensory contrast: the heat of the concrete versus the cool, cedar-scented foliage. skate strip juniper ren work

In high-end West Coast landscaping (Portland, Seattle, Vancouver), a designer named Ren (or a studio using the "Ren" prefix) popularized the "floating strip" method. Here, the junipers are not planted in soil, but in a specialized gritty mix that allows the "skate strip" to remain dry and clean. Ren Work implies using a steel edge restraint to keep the juniper perfectly flush with the pavement. Consider a modern home in Austin, Texas

Traditional gardens use topsoil. Skate strips use aggregate. The result is a living line of soft,

Juniperus species are the unsung heroes of difficult planting zones. For Skate Strip Juniper Ren Work, the plant must meet specific criteria: