DOVER RESIDENCE
A narrow site becomes far more than a corridor when form is used deliberately to shape experience. Strong lines, calibrated proportions, and purposeful shifts in grade or material can redirect the eye, slow movement, and create a sense of depth that the footprint alone can’t provide. Instead of fighting the constraints, good landscape design uses them—stretching space through rhythm, compressing it to build anticipation, and opening it strategically to create moments of relief. In a tight footprint, form isn’t just an aesthetic choice; it’s the primary tool for transforming limitation into clarity, character, and a landscape that feels larger than it is.