When you start to plan a garden it can be difficult to
resist going straight for the flowering plants. However a garden’s success will
depend more on it’s underlying structure, with the flowers just being the
‘icing on the cake’. Winter is the perfect time of year to see whether your
garden has good ‘bones’, and if the garden is looking a bit flat and one
dimensional then it is probably in need of some extra structure.......
The structure of a garden is the framework that creates the
backdrop to it’s seasonal delights, and is the bit that persists throughout the
year. It is the skeleton that provides strength and holds everything together.
Thinking in 3-dimensions is something we take for granted inside the house but
it is equally important in the garden.
The backbone of a garden consists of trees, hedges,
evergreen shrubs, walls, fences and other built elements, essentially those
parts that give a permanent and vertical dimension. In addition there are secondary structural
elements such as paths and paving that have a major impact on how we use the
garden.
A well-structured garden not only ensures year round shape
and interest (avoiding the dreary winter ‘flatscape’) but also allows you to
control the space and enable it to be used in the way intended. This does not
necessarily mean that the garden will be formal and rigid as the intention is
to overlay softer layers of planting, furniture or sculpture that will imbue
the space with the desired style and atmosphere.
The first stage of planning a garden’s framework is usually
very practical. It involves deciding, for instance, what the main routes need
to be (i.e. from the garage to the front door or from the back door to the shed
or patio) and where a good place to sit to enjoy the morning or evening sun, or
to create a shady terrace for eating, would be? Routes around the garden do not
necessarily need to be straight from A to B, but where you want curves or
corners in paths to add interest it is important to bear in mind our natural
instinct to take the most direct route. We have all seen the tracks in parks
cutting corners like animal trials, and these are known as ‘desire lines’. To
avoid this, a path can be combined with hedging, perhaps low, or solid areas of
planting that block and control the direction of movement.
Hedges are perhaps the most powerful tool available for
giving a garden definition. They enable a space to be divided into ‘rooms’ (a
commonly used analogy these days but a good one), and channel or block views.
Low hedges can act as physical barriers (to movement) without blocking views.
They can also provide a backdrop for sculptures, shelter from the wind and a
‘des-res’ for small birds.
Finally, any discussion on structure in the garden would not
be complete without mention of trees, and vertical components such as pergolas.
These can not only frame views, channel movement and ‘anchor’ a space but also
provide, with their lofty canopy, a subtle and welcoming atmosphere.
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