Landscape & Urban Design Issue 38 2019 | Page 7

A garden room is more likely to enhance your new space, providing planting – perhaps knee height or look like a part of the main building that they work in harmony with the thigh height so that the views are not rather than an additional add-on, structure’s scale and proportion. interrupted. It’s important for your with matching tiles, brickwork and other details. Ensuring a smooth transition between your garden room and your outside space certainly requires a specific approach, because with so much light and space it can be difficult to bring the room together and maintain an opulent aesthetic. When you first open the doors of your orangery and step out onto your patio, you’re walking into an extended space that feels like another room. To stay connected to the house, the area immediately outside Perfect garden planting the extension should look neat, An orangery or garden room needs to of a garden room’s structure is glazed, be functional, but it also has to have you only need to include low-level balance and flow. Nothing helps to manicured, and well-ordered. As most flower beds to have good depth too, so your home looks like it’s blended in with the surrounding foliage. Avoid thin, narrow strips of plants which won’t have much impact next to an extension. Think about using eight or nine plants together in a large bed or planter, rather than using just a couple. Bring larger plants behind them to create some depth. Plant another bed with the same design for continuity, and you’ll make a real statement in your garden. create that flow quite like a beautiful planting scheme, which will help your extension to blend in with its natural surroundings. An orangery strengthens the relationship that your home has with your garden, offering expansive views of the surrounding greenery and bringing the outside in. Choosing the right plants in your garden can only Issue 38 2019 Landscape & Urban Design 7