Create an ideabook for your next remodeling project!
Browse more than 1,500,000 photos from top designers and save your favorites
| Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
|
| Just as rooms need a focus, such as a fireplace or a window, gardens with simple geometric designs also need a point on which the eye can rest. This traditional design consisting of a central axis that divides the area has an archway to another garden as its main focus. Using a central path with a distant viewpoint is a great way to make a short garden seem longer. |
| The perfect symmetry of these simple geometric designs allows for the opportunity to decorate the flat planes created. Renaissance Europe saw the use of parterres and knot gardens in which simple — and later more complicated — shapes were delineated with low-growing evergreen plants. At first, as in this modern version of a knot garden, colored gravel was laid between the evergreen "lines." See more about parterre gardens |
|
by Isler Homes
»
Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
|
| Perhaps the simplest use of geometry and basic shapes in the garden is this very contemporary take on a French parterre. The overall square boundary is bordered with a line of clipped conifers echoing the central squares of evergreen "box" plants. We even have a "viewpoint" in the placement of the simple, classically designed bench. |
| This very modern courtyard garden has its roots in the past with its formally planted low beds — this time using grasses — in a symmetrical design. |
| The simplest two-dimensional design can be the most satisfying. In the 1930s, Dutch designer Mein Ruys was using interesting new ideas to give her gardens a framework. She laid a Mondrian-style grid on the ground to divide up the space. She then planted some areas while leaving others bare. Here we see a modern version of that using identical squares of grass, paving and pebbles — an almost maintenance-free design that would be perfect for a front garden. |
| Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
|
| Two-dimensional design is still very important today. The use of shape and line here, even without any plants, creates both interest and movement in a satisfying design based on the classical rules of scale and proportion. |
| Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
|
| The evolution of the modern three-dimensional design began in the middle of the 20th century when development in visual arts spread through architecture and eventually influenced garden design. The use of raised planted beds and even the positioning and height of the chaises seen here show how we have moved on from simple pattern making to creating a usable space. |
|
by SHKS Architects
»
Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
|
| The three-dimensional design of this front garden almost has its roots in the paintings of the 20th-century artist Mondrian. Its strong geometric-shape raised beds of differing heights are reinforced by the width of the retaining walls. All is softened, though, by the beautifully executed and understated plantings. |
| Like it? Save it to your Ideabook »
|
| Geometry can transform space into a cutting-edge landscape. Here we see the epitome of geometric garden design. The combination of lines, right angles and simple shapes works well, creating a clean, calm and uncluttered look. |
-----------------------------
Modern Furniture