Backyard design guide
7 ways to design a sustainable garden
Incorporate recycled materials and resource-minded practices for a stylish, earth-friendly retreat
Incorporating earth-friendly elements
In
Bob Buchbinder and Lynn Pearson’s San Francisco backyard, gently
curving paths link several stylish spaces—indoor, outdoor, and in
between. Many of the materials are recycled; most of the plants need
little in the way of care or even water.
Design: James Pettigrew and Sean Stout, Organic Mechanics, San Francisco..
Rescued shed
To some eyes, this weathered structure would have been a teardown. With new windows and wiring, though, it’s now a backyard getaway.
Low-water plants
Easy-care honey bush (Melianthus major) and a potted Monterey cypress (Cupressus macrocarpa ‘Saligna Aurea’) flank a small bench.
Salvaged stone
The 16-foot-diameter patio is made of granite remnants—mostly dumpster finds—mixed with metal sewer caps and bricks.
Found firepit
A 28-inch-diameter metal wok, turned into a wood-burning fire bowl, sits on a steel base made by one of the homeowners.
Living roof
An arbor of recycled copper pipes, covered with passion vines, shades the nearly hidden dining area.
Permeable paving
In the arbor-shaded dining area, Salmon Bay–colored pebbles let water seep into the ground rather than run off the property.
Wildlife-friendly fountain
This recirculating fountain provides fresh water for the butterflies and wild parrots that visit. Elegia capensis grows at left.
Source : Sunset.