Nancy Bryan Luce Herb Garden
Herbs are plants used for flavoring, medicine, and fragrance. The New York Unit of the Herb Society of America first designed this formal herb garden in 1948. The design was inspired by English knot gardens of the Tudor period (1485–1603).
In a knot garden, clipped plants form parterres (plant borders) that resemble intricate woven patterns when viewed from above.
In 1991 Penelope Hobhouse, a prominent English garden designer, created a new plan for the Herb Garden based on a design from a 17th-century gardening book, featuring two central knots of dwarf boxwood hedges. The carefully pruned, structured hedges contrast with the various shapes and textures of the herbs planted among them. In 2009 Martha Stewart and her team of horticulturists replanted the Herb Garden to feature more culinary herbs and added obelisk-shaped trellises, called tuteurs, that encourage vines to climb.