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Gatehouse Garden: A Dramatic Black Backdrop for a White Wildflower Meadow

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In London’s Stoke Common Nature Reserve, a gatehouse built in the early 1990s sits on three bucolic acres, surrounded by woodlands of ferns, pines, and rhododendrons.

Extensively remodeled, the five-bedroom home now has a burnt-wood extension, which acts as a dramatic black backdrop for an entryway courtyard garden. Taking cultural cues from the charred Japanese-style addition, which was created using traditional shou shugi ban techniques, London-based landscape architect Stefano Marinaz created a marvelously airy meadow garden, relying on a simple color palette of whites and pinks.

When Marinaz designed the landscape, he chose elements to connect the historic house with the new wing (clad in carbonized cedar boards) and the surrounding woodlands. Beyond the house, which is framed by the formal geometry of a pleached row of crab apple trees, is a hint of the wilderness beyond. A mown path lures visitors through an opening into the hedgerow to discover a forested fairyland beyond.

Photography by Rosangela Photography, courtesy of Stefano Marinaz Landscape Architecture.

gatehouse garden springtime alliums pleached crabapple trees by stefano marinaz Above: Pleached crab apple trees, a formal touch, screen the gatehouse entry. Imported from Belgium, the 12-year-old crab apple trees bloom with tiny pinkish-white flowers in spring.

For tips on how to plant malleable young trees in a very straight row and then train them to create a geometric screen, see Landscaping 101: Pleached Trees.

gatehouse garden rosa glauca and white alliums by Stefano Marinaz Above: White alliums create an airy backdrop for Rosa glauca. For a similar pink shrub rose with dark-plum-colored leaves, consider Rosa glauca; $16.95 from High Country Roses. gatehouse garden shou sugi ban facade pathway entry by Stefano Marinaz Above: As the seasons progress, grasses and meadow flowers take over. Long, tall fronds of culver’s root look like explosions of delicate white fireworks. For a similar unbranched variety, consider Veronicastrum virginicum ‘Album,’ which is £14.50 for three plants from Sarah Raven. For US gardeners, Veronicastrum virginicum ‘Album’ is $8.75 per plant from Digging Dog Nursery.

For more, see Must-Have Flower: All About Veronicastrum.

gatehouse-meadow-garden-grasses-wildflowers-stefano-marinaz Above: For a similar white astrantia, consider Astrantia major ‘White Giant’; $15.95 each from White Flower Farm.

The wildflower meadow was sown from seed. For similar seed mixes, see Sarah Raven Wild Flower Meadow Mix Seeds; from £7.50 to £34.95 depending on quantity and packaging. For US gardeners, see a variety of Wildflower Seed Mixtures from American Meadows.

alliums and astrantia by Stefano Marinaz Above: Purply-pink Allium sphaerocephalon, known as drumstick allium, is a member of the garlic family and grows from bulbs. Allium sphaerocephalon bulbs ship for fall planting; $9.25 for 25 at White Flower Farm. gatehouse garden hornbeam hedge by Stefano Marinaz Above: Visible behind the white snowballs of Allium ‘Mount Everest,’ a hedge of hornbeam trees (Carpinus betulus) hides the driveway and parking area. gatehouse garden yew hedges by Stefano Marinaz Above: At the base of the crab apple trees is planted Sarcococca x confusa (confused sweet box), which blooms with small fragrant flowers in winter months. winter box in bloom by Stefano Marinaz Above: For a similar fragrant shrub, consider Sarcococca hookeriana var. ‘Humilis‘; $11.99 for a quart-size pot from Lazy S’s Farm Nursery. gatehouse-garden-yew-hedges-stefano-marinaz Above: Yew hedges (Taxus baccata) pruned into undulating waves beckon visitors to follow the mown path into the woodland beyond. gatehouse gardens woodland paths by Stefano Marinaz Above: New walkways look as if they’ve always been part of the forest.

Marinaz enhanced the original plantings by adding magnolia trees, witch hazel, and dogwoods at strategic points along the path.

gatehouse garden woodland path woodpile by Stefano Marinaz Above: Dappled sunlight penetrates the tree canopy.

For maximum curb appeal, a garden should complement the architecture and style of a house. For tips, see our Hardscapes 101 guides, including our Exteriors & Facades 101 design guide and Fences & Gates 101: A Design Guide. See more ways to create a meadow garden with Japanese-style overtones:


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