Herb Garden
A specialized garden dedicated to growing culinary, medicinal, and aromatic herbs for cooking, healing, and sensory enjoyment. Herb gardens combine beauty and utility, offering fresh flavors for the kitchen, traditional remedies for wellness, and fragrant plants that delight the senses while often attracting beneficial pollinators and requiring minimal maintenance.

Key Features
Organized Layout
Thoughtful arrangement of plants based on use (culinary, medicinal, tea herbs), growing conditions (sun/shade, water needs), or cultural themes (Mediterranean, Asian, Native American).
Accessibility
Design that makes harvesting convenient with raised beds, containers, or strategic placement near the kitchen, often with paths allowing easy access to all plants.
Companion Planting
Strategic grouping of herbs that benefit each other or nearby vegetables through pest deterrence, flavor enhancement, or growth stimulation.
Containment Solutions
Methods for controlling spreading herbs like mint and lemon balm, such as dedicated containers, root barriers, or isolated planting areas to prevent garden takeover.
Seasonal Planning
Combination of annuals, biennials, and perennials that provides fresh herbs throughout the growing season, with consideration for succession planting and preservation.
Ornamental Integration
Incorporation of herbs with attractive flowers, interesting foliage, or structural qualities that contribute to the garden's aesthetic appeal beyond their practical uses.
Design Variations

Formal Knot Garden
Traditional design with herbs planted in intricate geometric patterns outlined by low hedges, often featuring aromatic herbs like lavender, rosemary, and sage in a symmetrical layout.

Kitchen Herb Garden
Practical arrangement of frequently used culinary herbs located near the cooking area, often in containers, window boxes, or small raised beds for convenient harvesting while preparing meals.

Medicinal Herb Garden
Focused collection of plants traditionally used for health and healing, organized by therapeutic properties or body systems they support, often including informational labels.

Spiral Herb Garden
Three-dimensional raised bed in a spiral shape that creates multiple microclimates from sunny and dry at the top to shadier and moister at the bottom, accommodating herbs with different needs.
Related Garden Types
If you're interested in herb garden, you might also want to explore these complementary garden styles:
Vegetable Garden
Productive growing space for edible plants that pairs perfectly with culinary herbs for a complete kitchen garden.
Explore Vegetable Garden AI Home DesignMedicinal Garden
Specialized garden focused on plants with therapeutic properties, expanding on medicinal herbs.
Explore Medicinal Garden AI Home DesignSensory Garden
Multi-sensory experience garden that benefits from aromatic herbs' fragrance and texture.
Explore Sensory Garden AI Home DesignComplementary Design Styles
These design styles work beautifully with your butterfly garden, each offering unique ways to enhance its aesthetic appeal:
Rustic
Natural, weathered aesthetic that enhances the traditional charm of herb gardens.
Explore Rustic StyleMediterranean
Sun-loving style perfect for many culinary herbs that originate from Mediterranean regions.
Explore Mediterranean StyleCottage
Informal, abundant style that beautifully incorporates herbs among flowers and vegetables.
Explore Cottage Style