Concern about climate change has us all looking for ways we can help. Here is our guide to 21 eco-friendly ways to make a difference when you design a landscape or hardscape project:
Capture Rainwater
One of the most eco-friendly things a garden can do is decrease rainwater runoff. Consider a permeable surface if you're doing a hardscape project, and use captured rainwater or graywater in the garden.
Above: An Abandoned Parking Lot Transformed to a Wildlife Habitat by landscape architect Christine Ten Eyck in Marfa, TX.
Surfaces that allow water to seep into the ground aid filtration and slow the flow into drains and waterways. From a design perspective, permeable surfaces introduce the satisfying crunch of gravel underfoot and add a softer element to hard surfaces.
Above: Our correspondent Ellen Jenkins thinks decomposed granite (aka DG) may be the ideal hardscape material: ""After I started looking into DG, I began to notice it everywhere: The pretty little path through the local recreation field that never gets muddy? Decomposed gravel. The soft, natural-looking gravel driveway, where the gravel stays put? Also decomposed granite. The mulch at the base of trees that keeps the ground weed-free? DG again."
For everything you need to know before deciding if decomposed granite is the right material for your hardscaping project, see Hardscaping 101: Decomposed Granite.
Above: In this hardscape detail, pea gravel abuts mulch, separated by metal edging. For more of this garden, see Architect Visit: Barbara Chambers at Home in Mill Valley, CA. Photograph by Nicole Franzen for Gardenista.
Pea gravel—a small, fluid stone found near bodies of water—has an appealingly smooth texture, the result of natural weathering. Pea gravel comes in sizes from 1/8 inch to 3/8 inch, about the size of a pea, and in a range of natural colors like buff, rust brown, shades of gray, white, and translucent. If you're trying to decide between decomposed granite and pea gravel, see Hardscaping 101: Pea Gravel.
Above: A ribbon driveway has a strip of grass down the middle. For more of this garden, see A Very American Garden by Stephen Stimson.
Our East Coast correspondent Jeanne Rostaing grew up with a ribbon driveway—two strips of concrete with grass in between—in Memphis: "Ribbon driveways were a natural progression from the ruts carved in the ground by the wheels of wagons and, later, automobiles," she writes. "It makes sense that if you're driving your vehicle from the street to the garage every day, you'd want to avoid wearing deep, muddy grooves into your lawn. The simplest and most economical way to do that: paving the areas where the wheels go and leaving the grass in the middle."
Nowadays ribbon driveways are back in fashion not only because of their eco-friendly permeability, but also because they're visually pleasing. For more about designing and installing a ribbon driveway, see Hardscaping 101: Ribbon Driveways.
Above: Philadelphia-based Shift Design makes stylish rainwater collectors, including a Fitzwater Raintank (R). For more information, see Minimalist Garden Products with a Mission.
Above: The Rainwater Hog designed by Australian architect Sally Dominguez is a plastic 53-gallon tank that can store water vertically or horizontally, against the side of the house or beneath a deck, depending on where you have the space to store it.
For more, see Ask the Expert: 7 Ways to Save Water in the Garden, from a Graywater Crusader.
Above: Drip (trickle, micro, or localized) irrigation benefits plants and crops by delivering water straight to their roots on a slow drip, thereby saving water and fertilizer, says Christine, who wrote our guide to everything you need to know about Hardscaping 101: Drip Irrigation.
Lawn Alternatives
Traditional turf is lovely to look at, but it's a water hog. We've rounded up some of our favorite alternatives, from green ground covers to wildflower meadows to sow in the front yard.
Above: Artificial grass by DuPont Forever Lawn. For more of this garden, see Architect Visit: Barbara Chambers at Home in Mill Valley, CA. Photograph by Liese Johannssen for Gardenista.
Artificial grass has come a long way since Astro Turf, and it requires no water, weeding, mowing, or fertilizing. Is it an environmentally friendly option for you? For the pros and cons, see Hardscaping 101: Artificial Grass.
Above: Replace turf with a wild meadow of native low-water wildflowers and or a hardy ground cover. Photograph by Erin Boyle.
For tips on sowing wildflowers in the garden, see our growing guides for Queen Anne's Lace, Cosmos, Foxglove, and Nasturtiums. Browse our Field Guide archives for growing tips for flowers, vegetables, and herbs,
Janet has investigated alternatives to water-guzzling turf. For more, see Fields of Green: 5 Favorite Lawn Substitutes, including Sheet Moss for shady spots; $24.99 for 5 square feet from TN Nursery.
Birds and Bees
Create a garden where birds and bees are welcome to help combat the rapid depletion of habitats. You can sow wildflowers, plant a pollinator garden, add native plant, or put a green roof on your house to give nature more of a chance.
Above: In Brooklyn garden designer Julie Farris planted a rooftop meadow of hardy perennials (inspired by garden designer Piet Oudolf's plant combinations for New Yotk City's High Line Park). For more of her rooftop garden, see Garden Visit: A Rooftop Meadow in Brooklyn.
Above: On the rooftop of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco is a perennial garden planted strictly with natives that feels "almost like a wilderness, like a resting spot found during a hike on California’s coast," says our contributor Cynthia Salaysay. For more of this garden, see Garden Visit: Academy of Sciences' Living Rooftop.
Above: Combine wildflower seeds with a soil mix to make a seed bomb that you can toss into a sunny spot in your garden—or into a sunny vacant lot as you drive past. For step-by-step instructions, see DIY: Wildflower Seed Bombs.
Above: One of England's best-loved gardens is filmmaker Derek Jarman's wildflower cottage garden in Kent. See more of it in Garden Visit: Derek Jarman's Prospect Cottage at Dungeness.
For more about wildflowers, see The Woman Who Beautified America: Lady Bird Johnson's Roadside Wildflowers.
Above: When native species of plants flourish, so do birds, bees, and wildlife. In Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains, 22 acres of open grazing land were transformed into a meadow native plants. For more of this project, see Landscape Architect Visit: Nelson Byrd Woltz and a Wild Virginia Meadow.
Heirloom Seeds
Connect your garden to gardeners who have come before you by planting heirloom seeds that have been passed on for generations for their delicious flavor, scent or hardiness. Unlike hybrids, heirlooms will reproduce exactly like their parents.
If you're designing an edible garden, see all our tips in Hardscaping 101: Design Guide for Edible Gardens.
Here are some of our favorite sources of heirloom seeds:
Above: Pasadena, CA- based Jardin Seed Company sells 135 different varieties of U.S.-grown vegetable and herb seeds including unusual varieties such as Cherokee Trail of Tears Pole Beans, Sharlyn Melon ("fantastic, unbelievable, juicy flavor," says Jardin founder James Lizardi), and Crimson Forest Bunching Onion. For more information about Jardin seeds, see Growing Guide: 135 Heirloom Seeds from Jardin.
Above: Offering more than 225 varieties, Kitazawa is the oldest seed company in the US specializing in Asian vegetables. For more, see Seed Source: Kitazawa Seed Co.
Above: Connecticut-based John Scheepers Kitchen Garden Seeds sells a wide selection of heirloom vegetable and culinary herb seeds. Photograph by Erin Boyle.
For more sustainable design, see:
- 11 Ideas to Steal from Drought Tolerant Gardens
- Hardscaping 101: Gabion Walls
- Remodeling 101: Solar Paneling Primer
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