Place of peace
This is a boutique hotel
Club villa
m’ friend the tree
Unknown fruit, hanging like a testicle
Paradise garden
Not Japan
Like a picture
Sunny afternoon
Heritage of the wise men and women
Our great friend
Headlong
A bigger friend
Jackfruit tree
Tamil tea pickers
Tea shrubs in beautiful nature of Sri Lankan mount…
Saint and the camera
Sky, water and buffalo
Land of the elephants
Peacock in action
Gents or chavs?
Four hours in London
Highlands
Randomly placed
Boutique hotel
Heaven of an architecture, imagine you live here
Open air bathroom
Indecent proposal
Garden magic gate
Rare black orchid
Briefly from the garden
Colours, shapes, nature
Yellow, green and blue
DSC 2752
Flo
DSC 2745
Freedom life of apes
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DSC 2726
Handsome
Glare of old times
Little Netherlands here
Tea breeze
Shy smile
You cannot stop the nature
Keywords
Unusual garden


Elements of Italian Renaissance gardens, English landscaping, Japanese garden art, & the water gardens of ancient Sri Lanka are all blended classical Greco-Roman statues pose insouciantly, and bacchanalian grotesque sculptures glare from tangles of undergrowth. Precise, orthogonal lines give way unexpectedly to baroque, serpentine contours. Engulfing everything is foliage of a deep, intoxicating green, broken occasionally by the hues and textures of wrought iron, stone, concrete, and clay. In the midst of Bawa’s personal, tropical Eden, all senses are heightened: to the views of the garden and the lake dappled by light and shade, to the sounds of birds and the rustling of leaves, and to the smell of the wet earth and grass after rain. Lunuganga is an experience of almost overwhelming aesthetic pleasure, and remains Bawa’s most extravagant creation and testament.
The entire estate has been preserved as Bawa left it at the moment of his death, and is now run as a country house boutique hotel offering an unparalleled opportunity to experience the architect’s vision as he intended: by inhabiting it.
The entire estate has been preserved as Bawa left it at the moment of his death, and is now run as a country house boutique hotel offering an unparalleled opportunity to experience the architect’s vision as he intended: by inhabiting it.
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