Published August 9, 2018
Garden Structures to Spruce Up Your Yard: Pergola, Arbor, Pavilion, and More
Garden structures can transform any ho-hum yard into an
enviable and inviting landscape. Blooming plants and a healthy lawn will set
the scene of your outdoor area, but structures such as a pergola or an arbor
will give it character and make it look like it was dreamed up by a landscape
architect—even if it was dreamed up by you!
Some garden structures serve a specific purpose, like
guiding growing vines, while others are just there to beautify the yard or
provide a covered area where your family can gather for dinner.
Let's break down the most common garden structures
homeowners build.
Pergola
A very common garden structure, a pergola is
wall-less and has an open-to-the-sky lattice roof and any number of posts or
columns. It can be free-standing or attached to the side of your home.
While most pergolas are built with rot-resistant wood, you
can use pretty much any building material, including vinyl. There are a wide
variety of designs, from minimalist modern to ornate
romantic. Some homeowners choose to buy pergolas in kits they can assemble on
their own, while others choose to custom-build them.
Arbor
Photo by Gardens by Monit, llc
Don't be confused by the open roof and posts—an arbor is not
the same thing as a pergola. Arbors are free-standing structures commonly
placed at the entrance of a yard or garden. If you've attended your fair share
of weddings, you've likely seen the bride and groom standing in front of an
arbor during the ceremony.
A traditional arbor can support vines such as wisteria,
creeping roses, or grapes, and is often used to shape fruit trees in to arches.
Pavilion
Photo by SURROUNDS Landscape
Architecture + Construction
Just like a pergola, a pavilion is an open-air garden
structure with columns or beams. Unlike a pergola, however, a pavilion is
topped with a closed roof. The design can be as simple as a square-shaped,
flat-roof structure that covers a picnic table, or as dramatic as a space with
an ornate, vaulted ceiling and a built-in fireplace with a flat-screen TV
mounted over the mantel.
Gazebo
Photo by Oak Tree Construction
Movie fans will definitely remember the gazebo in "The
Sound of Music" where young lovers Liesl and future
Nazi Rolf serenaded each
other to "Sixteen Going on Seventeen." To call a garden structure a
gazebo, it must be in the shape of a hexagon or octagon and topped with a
similarly sided and pitched roof. Some gazebos have walls, and some are open.
Trellis
Photo by Ronni Hock Garden &
Landscape
A trellis is a
flat, lattice framework of intersecting or interwoven wood or metal, intended
to support vines or train fruit trees to grow tall. But a trellis is way more
than just a practical garden tool. It can also be used to spruce up a blank
wall. Or, as you can see in the photo above, it can be a free-standing
structure that divides open space or provides privacy.
Topiary
via GIPHY
Shrubs and hedges can look messy when left to grow wild, but when they're
pruned into topiaries, they will give any garden a more structured, polished
aesthetic. Typically clipped into geometric shapes or animal figures, topiaries
are like living works of art.
Contact the experts on The Mary Gilbert Group to find a home with your dream outdoor living space! 541.371.5500 or sold@marygilbert.com.
By: Laura Winter, Realtor.com