(5)During the 1980s, declaration of meanings began to accompany the published photos and drawings of landscape designs. At conferences, landscape architects would describe their intention, their sources, and what the designs meant. Some authors merely claimed they were touching base once again with the vernacular matrix in which High Style design was embedded. Martha Schwartz, for example, reexamined the materials of the ordinary landscape and the typologies of the small, private garden and the shopping center. George Hargreaves spoke of a perceptually complex space at Harlequin Plaza in Inglewood, Colorado, from 1984, although he shied away from making direct claims about its meaning(s). The emerging generation of designers displayed a new interest in making form; and many of them claimed that these new forms would be meaningful. In reviewing landscape architecture to landscape design and, by extension, to significance, used by the makers or their critics: the Neoarchaic, the Genius of the Place, the Zeitgeist, the Vernacular Landscape, and the Didactic.