Garden Design Ideas with a Container Garden and with Outdoor Playset
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Magical Landscapes, LLC
A large common area terrace, with sweeps of seasonal colors and textures, using native perennials, shrubs and trees
User
Baskets look like giant flower balls because they are planted in the sides as well as the top. They give real impact when mounted on wooden posts (www.kinsmangarden.com). The baskets are planted with grasses, salvia, sweet potato vines, coleus, and begonias. Blue and red salvia, vinca, and marigolds are planted beneath the baskets. Design and photo by Pamela Crawford, who designs and installs landscapes in Palm Beach County, including Boca Raton, Delray Beach, Palm Beach, Jupiter, Wellington, and Palm Beach Gardens.
Landscape Projects, Inc.
Tulips and pansies provide early spring color to raised bed containers constructed with M-Brace brackets for added interest. In the summer, the owner plants two of the beds with vegetables (all of the sun on the property is in the front yard).
©Melissa Clark Photography. All rights reserved.
Austin Ganim Landscape Design, LLC
A crescent garden container filled with coleus, petunias, new guinea impatiens, mandevilla, and potato vine.
Leanne Michael L U X E lifestyle design
This gorgeous Spanish revival home required new stucco plaster, paint, iron fencing, completely new landscaping, aromatic and romantic garden and terrace furnishings perfect for entertaining and gazing the San Diego city line view.
Reynolds-Sebastiani Design Services
Secret garden gate and Cymbidium orchid urns. photos by Caitln Atkinson
Schmechtig Landscapes
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Chicago's North Shore Backyard Patio Idea using 3 container pots
Exterior Worlds Landscaping & Design
Exterior Worlds was contracted by the Bretches family of West Memorial to assist in a renovation project that was already underway. The family had decided to add on to their house and to have an outdoor kitchen constructed on the property. To enhance these new constructions, the family asked our firm to develop a formal landscaping design that included formal gardens, new vantage points, and a renovated pool that worked to center and unify the aesthetic of the entire back yard.
The ultimate goal of the project was to create a clear line of site from every vantage point of the yard. By removing trees in certain places, we were able to create multiple zones of interest that visually complimented each other from a variety of positions. These positions were first mapped out in the landscape master plan, and then connected by a granite gravel walkway that we constructed. Beginning at the entrance to the master bedroom, the walkway stretched along the perimeter of the yard and connected to the outdoor kitchen.
Another major keynote of this formal landscaping design plan was the construction of two formal parterre gardens in each of the far corners of the yard. The gardens were identical in size and constitution. Each one was decorated by a row of three limestone urns used as planters for seasonal flowers. The vertical impact of the urns added a Classical touch to the parterre gardens that created a sense of stately appeal counter punctual to the architecture of the house.
In order to allow visitors to enjoy this Classic appeal from a variety of focal points, we then added trail benches at key locations along the walkway. Some benches were installed immediately to one side of each garden. Others were placed at strategically chosen intervals along the path that would allow guests to sit down and enjoy a view of the pool, the house, and at least one of the gardens from their particular vantage point.
To centralize the aesthetic formality of the formal landscaping design, we also renovated the existing swimming pool. We replaced the old tile and enhanced the coping and water jets that poured into its interior. This allowed the swimming pool to function as a more active landscaping element that better complimented the remodeled look of the home and the new formal gardens. The redesigned path, with benches, tables, and chairs positioned at key points along its thoroughfare, helped reinforced the pool’s role as an aesthetic focal point of formal design that connected the entirety of the property into a more unified presentation of formal curb appeal.
To complete our formal landscaping design, we added accents to our various keynotes. Japanese yew hedges were planted behind the gardens for added dimension and appeal. We also placed modern sculptures in strategic points that would aesthetically balance the classic tone of the garden with the newly renovated architecture of the home and the pool. Zoysia grass was added to the edges of the gardens and pathways to soften the hard lines of the parterre gardens and walkway.
Garden Design Ideas with a Container Garden and with Outdoor Playset
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