Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine BANNER_SPACE
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine
Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine
July/August/September 2005

Gallery of additional photography from...

Rubble Stone Landscape





The Rose Garden at Brandywine Park, Wilmington, Delaware. Designed by Andy Durham & Associates, installed by Dan Gallagher and Denis Hare, and funded by the Friends of Wilmington, the garden walls are Avondale Brownstone from the D'Amico quarry in Avondale, Pennsylvania.
Photos courtesy of D'Amico Quarry, Inc.



Rubble Stone of two colors and dimension are combined in this rustic setting. The boulders are Pennsylvania flow stone which is soft sandstone and has no bedding.
Photo courtesy of Loukonen Brothers Stone.



Rubble stone in an artscape which mimics the backdrop of the mountains.
Photo courtesy of Loukonen Brothers Stone.



Jonathan Ochshorn states, "...fieldstone, rubble, or roughly-worked stone set in thick mortar beds are more often associated with modest works." This wall provides both privacy and a sense of enduring substance.
Photo courtesy of Loukonen Brothers Stone.



Three forty foot long in-ground storage containers were concealed and enhanced with a wall of Adirondack Natural Wallstone.
Photo courtesy of Adirondack Natural Stone, LLC.



"Quarry remnants make beautiful and practical wall stone." Pallets of rustic Adirondack Natural Wallstone ready for shipping.
Photo courtesy of Adirondack Natural Stone, LLC.



Lyons Red moss rock and boulders that have been randomly stacked. The hill in the background is the actual Lyons Quarry formation. The house was built at the back of the formation upheaval.
Photo courtesy of Loukonen Brothers Stone.


Return to article
Return to table of contents


www.buildingstonemagazine.com

Building Stone Magazine
©2006 by Building Stone Institute
www.buildingstoneinstitute.org
All rights reserved

Web Site by:
Lionheart Publishing, Inc.
506 Roswell Street, Suite 220, Marietta, GA 30060
Phone: 770-431-0867 | Fax: 770-432-6969
lpi@lionhrtpub.com
www.lionhrtpub.com


Building Stone Magazine Building Stone Magazine

Building Stone Magazine