COLUMNIST: KATIE REYNOLDS
The first stage is to work out how you want to use your garden. Is it for eating outside, children playing, growing vegetables, having friends and family round or having a shed for a particular hobby? Make a list of your requirements and then prioritise them. Depending on the size of your garden, it may be that you can not accommodate everything, so it is a good idea to think about what is most important to you.
From this list then you can knuckle into a bit more detail.
Now that you have compiled your wish list with some notes added, it is time to assess your plot. Work out which way the garden faces and see how the sun passes through the garden during the day. Is there a strong prevailing wind? Is the space flat, sloping, or on different levels? Measure up your garden and mark on the existing features which you are not planning to change such as any slopes, mature trees, and boundaries. Add a curved arrow of how the sun passes through the garden to help visualise the plot.
Once you are at the stage where you have your wish list, along with a basic sketch of your garden and its features, you have the fun part of being creative and marrying the two together.
You now know where the sunny spots are at different times of day, so that will dictate where best to have your seating areas for morning, noon and night. You could opt to have three seating areas if you have the space, or prioritise the main patio to be in the sunniest lunchtime spot and perhaps just a bench for a morning coffee or evening drink if space is limited.
Is this patio right next to the house? If not, you will need a path to get there, so add this in.
You may want to have your children’s play area in the shade or close to the house where you can keep an eye on them from the kitchen window. Keep going like this through your list to build in the different requirements.
I would recommend focusing on fewer zones and being generous with them, rather than squeezing in too much which can end up as a little bit of a hotch- potch. Consider the journey through the garden so that it feels cohesive going from one area to another.
Finally, it is really important that the design is in keeping with both the house and also the wider setting, both in terms of style and choice of materials, and that you consider the views from inside looking out.
So, there you have it, a basic step by step guide on how to layout your garden so it works for you and your specific requirements. If this all feels a little too much or you are still at loggerheads on how to proceed, then it’s time to call a garden designer to help you through the process.
Katie Reynolds Design is a garden and interior design studio for residential and commercial clients in Aberdeenshire and across the North East.
Katie works on a range of projects from city flats to country houses, public gardens to coastal properties. Follow Katie on Instagram and Facebook for or visit www.katiereynoldsdesign.co.uk to browse some of her recent projects.