In this chapter, this distinction is used to shed a critical light on the promotion of landscape as infrastructure, which has been developed in the current discourses on landscape urbanism and ecological urbanism. It will be argued that the emphasis of performance, functionality, and horizontality, which seems to follow the promotion of landscape as infrastructure, in some cases, could be counterproductive in relation to the environmental problems being addressed and that we need gardens of reflection, interrogation, and doubt in order to engage with the deeper complexities of territorial transformations. In order to substantiate this argument, we will visit two gardens designed by the Swiss landscape architect Georges Descombes.