12 Outdoor Screen Ideas That Are Pretty and Private
Translucent panels, slatted wood, laser-cut metal and plantings offer just the right mix of seclusion and views
Just as you don’t like looking up into your neighbours’ second-storey windows, they would probably prefer not to stare straight down at your fire pit from their bedroom. When considering how to carve out more privacy in your yard, look for ways you can use plants, pergolas, awnings and freestanding walls to screen views and muffle noise for mutual benefit. Here are 12 ideas to get you started.
2. Freestanding walls
Staggered corten steel and wood panels create a feeling of privacy in this Seattle front yard without completely closing the garden off from the street. Play with the heights of freestanding walls – notice how the ones here are sized to block a parked car from view – to adjust to the specifics of your site and what you’d like to screen.
Staggered corten steel and wood panels create a feeling of privacy in this Seattle front yard without completely closing the garden off from the street. Play with the heights of freestanding walls – notice how the ones here are sized to block a parked car from view – to adjust to the specifics of your site and what you’d like to screen.
3. Hedges
When choosing a plant for a hedge, consider whether you’d like total privacy in the form of a solid hedge or less privacy with one that is lighter and airier.
For maximum privacy and sound suppression, select evergreens with a dense growth habit, such as arborvitae (Thuja occidentalis), green juniper ‘Spartan’ (Juniperus chinensis ‘Spartan’) or cherry laurel (Prunus laurocerasus), and space them half of the recommended planting distance apart.
For lighter screens that allow light to pass through, choose evergreens such as fern pine (Podocarpus gracilior) or ‘Silver Sheen’ kōhūhū (Pittosporum tenuifolium ‘Silver Sheen’).
Make your hedges work for you
When choosing a plant for a hedge, consider whether you’d like total privacy in the form of a solid hedge or less privacy with one that is lighter and airier.
For maximum privacy and sound suppression, select evergreens with a dense growth habit, such as arborvitae (Thuja occidentalis), green juniper ‘Spartan’ (Juniperus chinensis ‘Spartan’) or cherry laurel (Prunus laurocerasus), and space them half of the recommended planting distance apart.
For lighter screens that allow light to pass through, choose evergreens such as fern pine (Podocarpus gracilior) or ‘Silver Sheen’ kōhūhū (Pittosporum tenuifolium ‘Silver Sheen’).
Make your hedges work for you
4. Pleached trees
For this hedges-on-stilts look, train young trees with pliable branches into nearly planar screens by bending and interweaving their branches. In this London backyard, pleached Carpinus trees kept to about 3 metres tall screen adjacent homes but take advantage of attractive views of neighbouring tree canopies.
For this hedges-on-stilts look, train young trees with pliable branches into nearly planar screens by bending and interweaving their branches. In this London backyard, pleached Carpinus trees kept to about 3 metres tall screen adjacent homes but take advantage of attractive views of neighbouring tree canopies.
5. Windowed views
A fence made of multi-coloured recycled wood surrounds the deck behind a San Francisco home, creating a private nook for an outdoor dining area. Irregularly shaped windows among the boards offer selective views of the trees beyond.
A fence made of multi-coloured recycled wood surrounds the deck behind a San Francisco home, creating a private nook for an outdoor dining area. Irregularly shaped windows among the boards offer selective views of the trees beyond.
6. Slatted screening
Create a feeling of enclosure and interrupt views from neighbouring homes with a more modern take on a traditional pergola.
The designers of this Los Angeles backyard used painted steel tubing mounted on posts to create a slatted privacy covering for a backyard lounge.
Create a feeling of enclosure and interrupt views from neighbouring homes with a more modern take on a traditional pergola.
The designers of this Los Angeles backyard used painted steel tubing mounted on posts to create a slatted privacy covering for a backyard lounge.
7. Laser-cut metal
Becoming more common in garden design, artistic screens made of laser-cut metal can be used to separate garden rooms, screen a spa or hide landscape bins. Mount them a few centimetres in front of a wall and add lights in the evening to appreciate the shadows cast by the metalwork.
For this home in Perth, WA, a laser-cut screen with a swirling, almost nautilus-like design provides privacy at the front entrance.
10 uses for laser-cut screens at home
Becoming more common in garden design, artistic screens made of laser-cut metal can be used to separate garden rooms, screen a spa or hide landscape bins. Mount them a few centimetres in front of a wall and add lights in the evening to appreciate the shadows cast by the metalwork.
For this home in Perth, WA, a laser-cut screen with a swirling, almost nautilus-like design provides privacy at the front entrance.
10 uses for laser-cut screens at home
8. Wood lattice
Inexpensive and widely available, crisscrossing wood lattice is a great screen material for partial privacy.
To more fully conceal an outdoor shower, the designers of this California backyard planted fragrant pink jasmine (Jasminum polyanthum) to fill in the gaps in the lattice. The spaces between the wood slats allow air to move freely and light to filter through to help dry the area after a rinse.
Inexpensive and widely available, crisscrossing wood lattice is a great screen material for partial privacy.
To more fully conceal an outdoor shower, the designers of this California backyard planted fragrant pink jasmine (Jasminum polyanthum) to fill in the gaps in the lattice. The spaces between the wood slats allow air to move freely and light to filter through to help dry the area after a rinse.
9. Panelled fencing
To create more privacy for this home in Austin, Texas, the designers mounted a series of freestanding wooden screens, staggered to allow passage between them. The advantage of using freestanding panels, rather than a traditional fence, is that you can adjust the height and placement of each section to selectively screen unattractive views or adjacent buildings.
To create more privacy for this home in Austin, Texas, the designers mounted a series of freestanding wooden screens, staggered to allow passage between them. The advantage of using freestanding panels, rather than a traditional fence, is that you can adjust the height and placement of each section to selectively screen unattractive views or adjacent buildings.
10. Colourful acrylic
If you need a screen for privacy or to separate one garden area from another, why not have it be an outstanding feature? Here, semi-translucent colourful sheets of Perspex acrylic mounted in stainless steel frames make a statement.
See more contemporary-style gardens
If you need a screen for privacy or to separate one garden area from another, why not have it be an outstanding feature? Here, semi-translucent colourful sheets of Perspex acrylic mounted in stainless steel frames make a statement.
See more contemporary-style gardens
11. Layered materials
Dense materials such as metal, stone, brick and concrete are by far the most effective at absorbing sound waves from traffic or industrial machines. Layer with lighter materials, such as hedges and wood fences, to block more sound than if the materials were used individually. Adding a more peaceful sound such as the splash of water can also help.
The designer of this Seattle courtyard did both: a freestanding metal wall with a built-in fountain adds privacy from neighbours and cuts the noise from a nearby street, while the falling water introduces a soothing sound.
Dense materials such as metal, stone, brick and concrete are by far the most effective at absorbing sound waves from traffic or industrial machines. Layer with lighter materials, such as hedges and wood fences, to block more sound than if the materials were used individually. Adding a more peaceful sound such as the splash of water can also help.
The designer of this Seattle courtyard did both: a freestanding metal wall with a built-in fountain adds privacy from neighbours and cuts the noise from a nearby street, while the falling water introduces a soothing sound.
12. Potted plants
Good-sized container plantings can be effective at screening views for rooftop and balcony gardens. Ornamental grasses provide light screening from adjacent apartments on this balcony garden in London’s Notting Hill neighbourhood, and would sway beautifully with the slightest breeze.
TELL US
How have you maintained your privacy in your outdoor areas? Share your ideas and tips in the Comments.
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Browse a gallery of artfully trimmed hedges
Good-sized container plantings can be effective at screening views for rooftop and balcony gardens. Ornamental grasses provide light screening from adjacent apartments on this balcony garden in London’s Notting Hill neighbourhood, and would sway beautifully with the slightest breeze.
TELL US
How have you maintained your privacy in your outdoor areas? Share your ideas and tips in the Comments.
MORE
Browse a gallery of artfully trimmed hedges
If you’re looking to block an adjacent building but still would like light to pass through a screen, frosted glass can be a highly effective material. In this San Francisco home, sand-blasted glass panels create a luminous privacy screen for an outdoor dining area.