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Bohemian Minimalism - Spanish Colonial Revival Garden Design in Mission Hills

A unique landscape design blending Bohemian Minimalism with the timeless character of Spanish Revival architecture. This project celebrates simplicity, texture, and ecological intelligence, creating a garden that feels both artistic and enduring.

Honoring historic Spanish Colonial Revival architecture with a modern, minimalist landscape design.

This Mission Hills project reimagines a historic Spanish Colonial Revival estate through the lens of Bohemian Minimalism. The garden celebrates the architecture’s heritage while introducing fresh, contemporary rhythms that connect indoor and outdoor life. Drought-tolerant Mediterranean plants, sculptural hardscape, and layered textures create a space that is both timeless and forward-looking, a living work of art that evolves with the family and the land.

For context, see our Journal essay on Spanish Revival gardens in Southern California - Design with Soul.

 

A short film presenting LASD Studio’s transformation of a Spanish Colonial Revival estate in Mission Hills. The design blends Bohemian Minimalism with Mediterranean resilience - drought-tolerant planting, sculptural hardscape, and timeless architectural dialogue. The result is a garden that honors history while embracing contemporary outdoor living, creating a sanctuary where heritage and modernity coexist in harmony.

 

The Spirit of Spanish Revival: Architecture and Landscape in Dialogue

At the heart of our work is the art of listening-listening to our clients, to the architecture, and to the natural surroundings. We were entrusted with a remarkable project: a historic Spanish Colonial Revival property in Mission Hills, originally built in the early 20th century.

 

Minimalist Geometry Meets Bohemian Flow


Our design challenge was to create a landscape that not only harmonizes with the architectural style of this Spanish Revival home but also establishes its own distinctive voice. Clean lines and minimalist geometry provide structure, while layered textures and bohemian flow bring warmth and movement. The balance of order and spontaneity allows the garden to feel curated yet alive — a setting where history and contemporary living evolve together.


Planting Palette: Mediterranean Resilience and Elegance

The planting palette draws inspiration from Mediterranean resilience: drought-tolerant shrubs, sculptural succulents, flowering perennials, and aromatic herbs create a garden that thrives in San Diego’s climate. Manzanitas, sages, rosemary, and grasses combine with modern groundcovers to soften architectural edges while respecting the spirit of Spanish Revival heritage. Seasonal shifts bring fragrance, color, and texture, making the garden a living, evolving artwork. This project has become one of our favorites, embodying how thoughtful design can both preserve tradition and spark renewal.

Outdoor Living: Spaces for Contemplation and Gathering

Beyond planting and form, this landscape was envisioned as a framework for life. Shaded terraces and intimate alcoves invite quiet moments of reflection, while open courtyards and garden rooms welcome family gatherings, celebrations, and artful living. The garden flows with the rhythms of daily life, equally suited for private contemplation and social connection. By blending historic elegance with modern comfort, the outdoor spaces extend the home’s architecture into a sanctuary where people, art, and nature coexist.

 

Existing Condition: From Heritage to Renewal

 

PROJECT DESIGN DRAWINGS

LASD Studio taking project from beginning, through permitting process until full realization. whether it is new construction of historical designation or landscape renovation private and comercial properties.


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Mission Hills Sanctuary Garden: Spanish Colonial Revival Reimagined

Landscape design in Mission Hills, San Diego inspired by Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. A private garden uniting front and backyard through structure, planting, and ecological balance.

A garden sanctuary in Mission Hills, San Diego, designed as an evolutionary landscape system rooted in Spanish Colonial Revival heritage.

A short film of LASD Studio’s Mission Hills Sanctuary Garden, reinterpreting the Spanish Colonial Revival style in San Diego. The design unites front and backyards into a coherent vision, blending historic architecture with Mediterranean planting and the studio’s philosophy of Designing Landscapes as Evolutionary Systems.

 

For context, see our Journal essay on Spanish Revival gardens in Southern California - Design with Soul.


 

LASD Studio works across garden design, landscape architecture, urban design, and regional planning, rooted in San Diego and working internationally.

This Garden Sanctuary in Mission Hills, San Diego reinterprets the Spanish Colonial Revival style, connecting architecture and landscape into a unified vision.

From the earliest design discussions, we emphasized the importance of architectural gravity: the garden must feel as though it belongs to the style of the property. This approach establishes a coherent identity rooted in Spanish Colonial Revival, while leaving space for new elements to emerge over time.

The philosophy behind the project reflects our broader vision of Designing Landscapes as Evolutionary Systems landscapes that honor tradition, embrace the present, and remain open to future growth and transformation.

Design Philosophy

The project draws on the architectural gravity of Spanish Colonial Revival style. The garden becomes an extension of the house, uniting front and backyard in a coherent vision. While the front yard reflected the historic style, the backyard lacked it, our design bridges the gap, ensuring a seamless identity and space for future evolution.

Concept Vision

The design embraces structured order and fluid openness, inspired by revival-era courtyards and sanctuaries. It leaves space for new elements to emerge organically, aligning with our philosophy of Designing Landscapes as Evolutionary Systems.

 

Existing Condition


Before the redesign, the backyard was disconnected from the home’s style. The transformation began with unifying elements — walls, planting, and courtyards — into a holistic Spanish Revival sanctuary.

 

PROJECT DESIGN DRAWINGS

 

LASD Studio developed the concept with the vision of the garden as the heart and spirit of the property, rooted in the timeless elegance of the Spanish Colonial Revival style. The project is composed of three main zones: the welcoming front yard and entry sequence, a spacious deck for gatherings, and the intimate backyard Sanctuary Garden.

To enhance the gentle yet powerful aesthetic of the space, we introduced design elements characteristic of the style: wavy hedges, trellises, water features, patios, and arbors. Each element carries both functional and symbolic weight, we are creating rhythm, shade, and a sense of timeless beauty. In the backyard, a curved pathway system was designed to follow an organic flow of energy, guiding movement through the Sanctuary Garden and reinforcing the essence of harmony, reflection, and connection to nature.


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Spanish Revival Garden Design in Coronado, California

A Spanish Colonial Revival garden in Coronado, California, blending Moorish details, courtyards, fountains, and lush planting. This design complements historic architecture with timeless Mediterranean elegance.

Where heritage meets modern life style

Landscape Architectural Design - Bohemian Minimalism

This Coronado estate reinterprets the elegance of Spanish Revival architecture through a carefully composed garden design. Rooted in the traditions of Mediterranean, Moorish, and Gothic influences, the landscape features courtyards, pergolas with vines, colorful tiles, and terracotta details that harmonize with the home’s historic architecture. A grand swimming pool, shaded outdoor rooms, and lush fruit tree plantings create both beauty and functionality, offering serene transitions from the street to private living spaces. Designed as a living cultural landscape, the garden merges history, ecology, and comfort, reflecting LASD Studio’s commitment to creating landscapes in balance with nature.

 

For context, see our Journal essay on Spanish Revival gardens in Southern California - Design with Soul.


 

We began this journey by looking at historical documents about the property and dive into Spanish Revival essence.

Spanish Revival (Colonial Revival) 1915-1931 …


This style appears in North America during Panama - California Exposition. This is eclectic combination of early Spanish colonization of North and South America, started in Florida and California. Roots of this style coming from traditional Spanish, Mediterranean architecture with earlier influence of Moorish and Gothic architecture. This style became known as Spanish Revival, Colonial Revival or Spanish Eclectic. The main elements of this style are: Curves and arches, white stucco exterior and wall, colored tiles with Spanish ornament, terracotta roof tiles, plenty of balconies with beautiful ironwork, wooden doors and gates, cozy courtyards and patios with large terracotta pots small fountains. Sometimes we can see influence of Moorish architecture like lanterns with colorful glass and pavement of with special ornament.

Hand-drawn diagram showing the roots of Spanish Revival architecture as an eclectic combination of Traditional Spanish, Moorish, and Gothic influences, popularized in California in the 1920s.

Spanish Revival Style Diagram

Spanish - Moorish Landscape Architectural design in California

Referred to as Spanish Revival, Colonial Revival, or Spanish Eclectic, this architectural language is read through form before ornament; curved walls, shallow arcs, and thresholds that soften the transition between interior and exterior.

Surfaces are continuous; lime-toned stucco holding light across the day. Rooflines settle in terracotta; tiles repeating in measured rhythm, absorbing heat, releasing it slowly.

Detail is precise, but never isolated. Hand-painted ceramic tiles introduce color at moments of contact; risers, fountains, edges where water meets stone. Wrought iron defines boundaries lightly; balconies, gates, railings that filter rather than close. Wood carries weight at the threshold; doors set deep within walls, marking entry through shadow.

The courtyard remains the center; enclosed, scaled to the body, shaped by proportion rather than size. Water sits within it; a fountain, contained, reflective, cooling the air as it moves.

Moorish influence appears in pattern; geometry underfoot, light passing through lanterns, repetition creating order without rigidity.

In Coronado, this project works within that lineage; not as replication, but as continuation. The language remains, yet the space adjusts to present use; open, inhabited, aligned with contemporary life while holding its architectural origin intact.

Historic site plan and garden details for a 1926 Spanish Revival residence in Coronado, showing plot layout, fountain design, pergolas, and courtyard structures by Requa & Jackson Architects.

Historic Site Plan and Garden Details

Historic 1926 architectural elevations of the Coronado Spanish Revival residence, designed by Requa & Jackson Architects, showing detailed stucco, arches, terracotta roof tiles, and ornamental ironwork.

Historic Architectural Elevations


Side yard patio with Spanish revival fountain, stucco walls and satillo tiles carpet

Intimate side-yard private patio with Santa Barbara stucco walls, traditional Spanish fountain and satillo tiles as carpet.

Historical Research and Foundations

Our journey began by studying historical documents and original architectural drawings of the property. This research allowed us to fully immerse ourselves in the essence of Spanish Revival, ensuring that the garden design would not only complement the home but also expand on its cultural narrative.

Visual boards and material palettes were prepared to experience the spirit of the style before design development began. From tiles to lanterns, from pergola structures to Mediterranean planting, every element was carefully selected to harmonize with the house.

Mood board with Spanish Revival garden elements including wrought-iron birdcage, rustic potting bench, terracotta plant pots, patina metal textures, and vintage garden faucets.

Herb Garden Mood Board

Mood board highlighting Spanish Revival hardscape materials such as clay brick herringbone patterns, rustic stone paving, terracotta textures, wood grain, and gravel pool edging.

Hardscape & Paving Mood Board

Mood board of Mediterranean herb garden design showing rosemary bundle, terracotta pots with basil, mint, chives, sage, and rosemary, alongside rustic wooden planters.

Herb Garden Mood Board


~ 7 architectural elements of Spanish Revival Garden Style ~


Designing Transitions and Garden Zones for life

One of the main responsibilities of this design was to respect and enhance the architecture while creating fluid outdoor transitions. Key design strategies included:

Main entrance courtyard. A welcoming sequence with fruit trees and a pergola covered in vines, leading visitors toward the front door with the sound of a small fountain.

Street buffer. Planting fruit trees along the street edge creates privacy, reduces noise, and strengthens the sense of arrival.

Garden circulation. From the entrance, pathways extend toward the main garden, vegetable garden, guest house, and outdoor dining terrace.

Private courtyard & pool. A secluded courtyard integrates a 40-foot swimming pool, surrounded by Mediterranean and Moorish-inspired planting. Pergolas and shaded seating areas create comfortable gathering spaces for family and guests.

Comprehensive masterplan of Spanish Revival estate in Coronado, California, showing pool, courtyards, gardens, guest areas, and circulation layout designed by LASD Studio.

Spanish Colonial Revival - Full Site Masterplan - Coronado, Southern California

Moorish Influences

Under Moorish influence, the space begins to operate differently; not through objects, but through relationships.

The ground carries a quiet geometry. Patterns unfold beneath each step, sometimes noticed, often only felt; a subtle order that steadies movement without announcing itself.

Light drifts through the structure and catches on detail. Lanterns temper its intensity, breaking it into fragments that move across plaster and stone; by afternoon, shadow deepens, edges soften, the space becomes more intimate without closing.

Color gathers where use brings attention. At the edge of water, along a low wall, within tile set into the surface; blues, ochres, and earth tones held close, never extended too far, allowing the eye to rest.

There is a distant echo of the courtyards of Alhambra; not in replication, but in proportion and atmosphere. Water cools, shade protects, pattern gives clarity. The garden and the architecture are not separate conditions; they are read as one.

These references are absorbed rather than applied. They settle into the project, adjusting to its climate, its scale, its daily use.

What remains is a layered space, where history is present but quiet, and where light, material, and movement continue to shape the experience over time.

Detailed plan of entrance courtyard for Coronado Spanish Revival garden, featuring a central Moorish-inspired fountain, breakfast terrace, and pathways leading to the main entrance.

Entrance Courtyard Detail

LASD Studio Philosophy

At LASD Studio, we design landscapes as living cultural systems, shaped by history, but always evolving with ecology. Every project aims to close the cycle of clean water, fresh air, fertile soil, and biodiversity for future generations.

Our Spanish Revival Garden in Coronado reflects this vision: it honors architectural tradition, enriches ecological performance, and creates a timeless sanctuary where people and nature thrive together.

Hand-drawn perspective sketch of Spanish Revival entrance courtyard in Coronado, featuring a central star-shaped tiled fountain, planting beds, and historic stucco façade with terracotta details.

Entrance Courtyard Perspective

Here we solved important issue of the traffic from the street by planting a fruit trees. Pergolas with vines will create a great transition, that will be followed by little additional courtyard fountain.
What a great way to come home.

From here, we can go to main garden, vegetable garden, guest house and garden table.

Detailed plan of Spanish Revival garden design showing central fountain, arbor-covered pathways, vegetable garden, fruit tree orchard, and garden table area.

Garden Axis Plan with Fountain

Private courtyard shared with guests. Here we will have 40ft size swimming pool.

Plan view of Coronado Spanish Revival estate pool and patio, with pergola-covered seating, adjacent covered lounge patio, and surrounding hardscape details.

Pool and Patio Plan - enclosed patio - Spanish Revival Garden Design


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Landscape Design in Hillcrest San Diego - Baroque Garden Project

A Baroque-inspired garden in Hillcrest, San Diego. Designed with symmetry, geometric parterres, and sculpted greenery, this project revives the grandeur of European tradition while adapting to California’s climate and lifestyle.

A Timeless Symphony of Geometry, Ornament, and Elegance

Baroque Landscape Architecture & Garden Design in Hillcrest, San Diego, California

Baroque Garden design in Hillcrest, San Diego. Architectural visualization of vision.

 

Baroque gardens emerged in 17th century Europe as an extension of architecture into land. Not as decoration, but as structure.

In France and Italy, landscape was organized through long axes, controlled views, and precise ground geometry. Space was read from the house outward. Lines were not arbitrary. They directed movement, framed perspective, and established order.

Designers like André Le Nôtre refined this into a clear spatial language. A central axis anchors the composition. Secondary axes extend and balance it. Parterres define the ground plane. Water reflects light and stabilizes the visual field.

The garden becomes legible. You understand where you are, where you are moving, and how the space is held together.

Video walkthrough of a Baroque-inspired garden in Hillcrest, San Diego, showcasing parterres, symmetry, clipped hedges, fountains, and ornamental design adapted to Southern California living.

Baroque gardens were intended to illustrate the mastery of man over nature in a well structured composition to support architecture of the estate.

Baroque Garden Design Logic in Southern California

The Baroque approach remains relevant because it is not dependent on climate. It is based on structure.

Geometry organizes the site. Paths define circulation. Planting is layered and controlled, not spread loosely across the ground. Clipped forms are used with restraint. Mediterranean and drought-tolerant species replace traditional European palettes.

Water is reduced, but still present as a point of focus.

What remains is the underlying order. Not a historical reconstruction, but a translation into local conditions.

 

Relationship to Spanish Colonial Revival

Spanish Colonial Revival architecture already carries this logic. In fact there are elements of Baroque architecture that influenced development of Spanish Revival Architectural style. In this proposal - what you see, is symmetry, entry alignment, the way courtyards are framed and defined. Open space is not accidental - It is in order.

This creates a direct connection to Baroque landscape principles.

The garden extends the architecture rather than competing with it. The central axis aligns with the entry. The foreground is held by geometry. Planting softens edges without dissolving structure.

Stone, shadow, and vegetation operate together as one system.

 

Please visit out

Series of Styles and Epochs of Art that Influenced Landscape Architecture and Garden Design.



Section #4 - The Spectacle of Renaissance & Baroque Gardens


 

Central to the design is the orchestration of space through symmetry, parterres, and focal points, creating a theatrical garden experience where every path and vista is carefully choreographed. Sculptural plantings, clipped hedges, and decorative paving set the stage, while water features and garden ornaments add layers of refinement.


Beyond its architectural beauty, the garden has been carefully planned with sustainable planting selections that honor the spirit of Baroque grandeur while ensuring year-round vibrancy in San Diego’s environment. This fusion of heritage and innovation results in a living work of art - a private sanctuary that reflects both cultural richness and modern luxury living.


Long Term Performance of Structured Landscapes

A structured landscape changes how a property functions over time.

Movement becomes intuitive. Views are intentional. Maintenance becomes predictable.

The site holds its form as it matures. This is where historical discipline meets contemporary performance. Not style as an image, but as a framework that supports the landscape over decades.


EXISTING CONDITION

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