Garden Types
Explore different types of gardens and outdoor spaces to enhance your property's beauty, functionality, and connection with nature.
Woodland Garden
A naturalistic garden that mimics the layers and plant communities found in forest ecosystems, creating a serene, shaded environment.
Pollinator Garden
A garden designed to attract and support bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, and other beneficial insects that help plants reproduce.
Therapeutic Garden
A garden specifically designed to improve physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health through interaction with nature.
Knot Garden
A formal garden with intricate geometric patterns created by low hedges, often featuring aromatic herbs and colorful infill plants.
Moonlight Garden
A garden designed to be enjoyed in the evening, featuring white flowers, silver foliage, and fragrant plants that reflect moonlight.
Japanese Zen Garden
A minimalist dry landscape garden that uses rocks, gravel, and sparse plantings to create a meditative space for contemplation.
French Formal Garden
A highly structured garden with symmetrical layouts, clipped hedges, parterres, and geometric patterns expressing order and control.
Coastal Garden
A garden designed for seaside environments, featuring salt-tolerant plants, grasses, and elements that complement ocean views.
Sensory Garden
A garden designed to stimulate all five senses through fragrant plants, textural elements, edibles, sound features, and visual interest.
Urban Garden
A garden adapted to city environments, often utilizing small spaces, vertical elements, and creative solutions for limited ground area.
English Cottage Garden
An informal, abundant garden style with densely planted flowers, herbs, and edibles creating a romantic, seemingly unplanned aesthetic.
Tropical Garden
A lush garden featuring exotic plants with bold foliage, vibrant flowers, and a layered structure creating a jungle-like atmosphere.
Desert Garden
A garden featuring drought-resistant plants such as cacti, succulents, and other xerophytes arranged among decorative rocks and sand.
Water Garden
A garden centered around water features such as ponds, streams, or fountains, often incorporating aquatic plants and sometimes fish.
Rock Garden
A garden designed with an emphasis on rocks, stones, and gravel, often featuring alpine plants or drought-tolerant species.
Rain Garden
A planted depression designed to capture and filter rainwater runoff from roofs, driveways, and other hard surfaces.
Permaculture Garden
A sustainable, self-sufficient garden system that mimics natural ecosystems with multiple layers of useful plants working together.
Herb Garden
A specialized garden dedicated to growing culinary, medicinal, and aromatic herbs, often arranged in patterns for easy access.
Italian Renaissance Garden
A formal garden style featuring symmetrical design, classical elements, terracing, water features, and geometric patterns.
Shade Garden
A garden designed specifically for areas with limited direct sunlight, featuring plants that thrive in partial to full shade.
Rooftop Garden
A garden created on building roofs, utilizing lightweight materials and containers to provide green space in urban environments.
Children's Garden
An interactive garden space designed specifically for young people to engage with nature through play, discovery, and hands-on activities.
Stumpery
A Victorian garden feature using dead tree parts arranged artistically to create habitat for woodland plants and wildlife.
Winter Garden
A garden designed to provide visual interest during cold months through structural elements, evergreens, and plants with winter appeal.
Gravel Garden
A low-maintenance garden style using free-draining stone or gravel with drought-tolerant plants that thrive in poor soil conditions.
Vertical Garden
A garden that grows upward using walls, trellises, and other structures to support plants, maximizing space in urban environments.
Forest Garden
A multi-layered garden system that mimics woodland ecosystems with trees, shrubs, herbs, and ground covers, often featuring edible plants.
Native Garden
A garden composed of plants indigenous to the local region, supporting local wildlife and typically requiring less water and maintenance.
Butterfly Garden
A garden specifically designed to attract and support butterflies throughout their lifecycle, featuring nectar plants and larval host plants.
Meditation Garden
A contemplative garden space designed to promote mindfulness, relaxation, and spiritual connection through carefully selected elements.
Knot Garden
A formal garden with intricate geometric patterns created by low, clipped hedges that intertwine and overlap to form decorative knot designs.
Moonlight Garden
A garden designed to be enjoyed in the evening, featuring white flowers, silver foliage, and fragrant plants that reflect moonlight and release scent at night.
Japanese Zen Garden
A minimalist dry landscape with rocks, gravel, and raked patterns that creates a meditative space inspired by Japanese aesthetics.
French Formal Garden
A symmetrical, geometric layout with clipped hedges, parterres, and topiary that demonstrates order and human control over nature.
Coastal Garden
A garden featuring salt-tolerant plants with a windswept, nautical vibe that captures the essence of seaside living.
Sensory Garden
A garden designed to engage all five senses through fragrant flowers, textural elements, edibles, colorful blooms, and sound features.
Urban Garden
A small-scale, vertical, or container garden designed for city spaces that maximizes limited area while providing greenery in urban environments.