Garden Features Sheffield

In many cases, the majority of the garden design framework is built up from hard landscape features. These consist of the boundaries that surround the site, the practical or decorative structures that include greenhouses, sheds and pergolas, and the surfaces such as paths, terraces and decks.

Green House
0114 2670779
132-134 Crookes
Sheffield
Valleyside
0114 2301925
Bell Hagg
Sheffield
Green Spirit Hydroponics Ltd
01142 753353
8-10 Stanley Street
Sheffield
Leabank Nurseries
0114 2852680
Loxley Road
Sheffield
Rhinegold Garden Centres
0114 2851487
Loxley Road
Sheffield
Greenhouse
0114 2660384
399-401 Ecclesall Road
Sheffield
Water Garden Centre
0114 2310225
328 Langsett Road
Sheffield
Home & Garden
0114 2351325
237 Ringinglow Road
Sheffield
Kingfield Kindergarten
0114 2557801
125-127 Psalter Lane
Sheffield
Lee Bank
0114 2852680
Loxley Road
Sheffield
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Garden Features

Garden Features

Garden Features

In many cases, the majority of the garden design framework is built up from hard landscape features. These consist of the boundaries that surround the site, the practical or decorative structures that include greenhouses, sheds and pergolas, and the surfaces such as paths, terraces and decks.

The selection of these elements may need to be decided by you and your family if you are planning and designing a new garden. When making a final decision about the size, type of material and layout of each of these features, you need to carefully consider the range of alternatives available within each category, the choice of which will greatly affect the overall visual finish of the garden, the ease or complexity of construction and the cost.

If you move into an established garden, some, or even all of these elements may already be in place. Ideally, they will fit your requirements perfectly and need no modification, but in most cases, there may be a need for improvement, alteration or expansion.

The order in which you lay or build these components often follows a set pattern: the boundaries first, followed by the surfaces and finally the various features that add interest to the garden, such as water features, archways and living areas. Plants are then added into the scheme; not only as decorative borders and beds, but also as features to soften and surround the garden. This may include using hedging for boundaries, plant screening material on arches or pergolas, or decorative features such as bog gardens, rock gardens or raised beds.

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