Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (2024)

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (2)

Let's Take a Kitchen Garden Tour

Step through this beautiful garden gate with us and tour a twin garden installed by Rooted Garden in Houston, Texas, for our fantastic client Ted back in 2020.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (4)

Kitchen Garden Design

These homeowners were able to dedicate prime real estate in their backyard to this kitchen garden.

Normally, in a large space like this, we would do a four-garden classic design, but we went for extra-long twin beds in this case. The raised beds are each 20ft x 3ft x 1.5ft. We don't often go over 8 feet long for raised beds, and very rarely do we go over 15 feet for one continuous garden because the sides of the raised beds can warp. These beds have a little extra internal support to keep them strong and functional.

Twin gardens lend themselves to symmetrical beauty and make the most of a space that's wider than it is deep or deeper than it is wide. In this case, the client had a large rectangular spaces in the main lawn he wanted to take full advantage of. To have a twin garden in your own space, you'll need a minimum of 13 feet of width available.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (6)

Cedar Raised Garden Beds

Untreated cedar is a beautiful, natural material that matches the style of this home.

These beds will also last for decades because we build with 2-inch thick boards for greater durability. If you're ready to build your own raised beds, prioritize purchasing the thickest boards your budget will allow. Boards that are 1-inch thick will not give you the same durability when faced with weather and dense soil.

We finished these raised beds with trim pieces for a clean, polished look.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (8)

Garden Trellises

Garden trellises provide year-round vertical interest in a garden. They also help increase airflow, maximize the growing space, and keep vining plants healthy.

In Houston, Texas, where this garden is located, gardeners can make use of these trellises all 12 months of the year if they grow the right plants for their temperatures. These trellises regularly support vining tomatoes, pole beans, and cucumbers.

Even if not covered in lush vines, though, these arches would still look beautiful. And that's why trellises are my not-so-secret ingredient for making kitchen garden design magic.

An arch trellis is the perfect trellis option for a twin garden like this one because it connects the two growing spaces and gives these vining plants as much room to grow as they need.

Shop This Look

The Traditional Diamond Rounded Trellis features stunning diamond latticework. Each diamond supports vining plants like tomatoes, cucumbers, and pole beans.

The rounded shape of the trellis works well in traditional settings and adds a formal touch to your kitchen garden.

Garden Pathways and Borders

Garden pathways allow gardeners to visit their garden with ease and move about comfortably without worrying about mud. They also prevent weeds and help protect the cedar raised beds during rainy weather. Gravel works both functionally and aesthetically in the kitchen garden space and provides a clean area, drains quickly, and requires very little upkeep. This garden pathway features blackstar gravel with concrete stepping stones for even greater ease of movement around the space.

(Learn more about designing and installing your own garden pathways here.)

The metal edging around the garden space serves as a border to separate the garden from the rest of the backyard, keep grass at bay, and contain the gravel.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (10)

Fruits, Vegetables, and Herbs

These beds are intensively planted. Intensive planting is a way of packing in the plants in your kitchen garden with the intention of harvesting more often from a variety of different vegetables, fruits, leafy greens, and herbs. The aim is to get more production out of a small space and avoid having bare soil, which dries up quickly and invites weeds.

The client loves growing his own fresh, organic vegetables and herbs, and this garden definitely seems like a celebration of his passion and skills.

(Learn more about intensive planting here.)

Thanks to the tunnel created by the arches and the exuberant greenery of the plants growing overhead, walking down the center of this garden feels like you're stepping through a portal and entering your own peaceful, magical world.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (12)

What's Planted and Growing Here

The garden is designed so that in-season vining plants, like the tomatoes pictured below, can climb up the three trellises and still leave plenty of growing space for leafy greens like kale, spinach, and swiss chard. The height of the raised beds (18 inches) gives the roots of larger plants like tomatoes, kale, and cucumbers plenty of room to dig their roots down deep. And at 3-feet wide, these beds are narrow enough for the middle of the bed to be easily accessible for planting, tending, and harvesting, especially considering you can access the garden from all sides.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (14)

The client plants an herb border around the outside edge of each raised bed that includes chives, sage, parsley, oregano, and dill.

Here, you can see cherry tomatoes growing up the arch trellis and while chives hang over the sides.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (16)

Purple pole beans climb another arch trellis. While tomatoes on an arch trellis has become a sort of Gardenary signature, pole beans can be every bit as lush and gorgeous.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (18)

Putting herbs like sage on the edge and in the corners of each raised bed allows them to drape elegantly over the sides at the peak of their growth.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (20)

Here is some celery basking in the rainy day.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (22)

We normally encourage gardeners to plant the two sides of their garden symmetrically, but we're fine with breaking the "rules" if the results are this stunning (and the fruits, we assume, still equally delicious). Here, you can see the back side of this arch trellis hosts vining cherry tomato plants, while the front is covered in cucumbers. The top of the trellis is a lush canopy of greens where the two sides meet.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (24)

The cucumbers seem happy enough to share their large arch trellis.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (26)

I hope you enjoyed touring this special kitchen garden. Explore more Rooted Garden designs here.

If you're still waiting to set up your own kitchen garden, we'd like to invite you to work with aGardenary-trained professional designerto have your kitchen garden expertly planned, designed, and built with confidence. Your designer will guide you through every step of the way—including selecting the best location and style for your garden—so that you end up with a beautiful and productive hardscaping piece in your outdoor space, just like this twin garden.

Our experienced designers are ready to help you today.Get started with your designer.

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (27)

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (28)

Get professional design experience at your fingertips

Let a certified Gardenary designer create a custom raised bed design for your space and growing goals. We'll provide a step-by-step plan so you can build your own magical kitchen garden space with confidence.

book your design

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (30)

Raised Garden Bed Design Inspiration • Gardenary (2024)

FAQs

What is the best layout for a raised bed garden? ›

Don't make your beds wider than 4 feet, this way you can easily reach to the center. The ideal depth is between 12 and 24 inches. Leave at least an 18-inch path between beds, more if you want wheelbarrow access.

What do you put in the bottom of a raised garden bed? ›

Best Soil for Raised Garden Beds

We recommend buying high-quality, nutrient-rich soil in bulk. Or, you can make a soil mix with equal parts topsoil, organic materials (leaves, composted manure, ground bark), and coarse sand.

How deep should a raised bed be for tomatoes? ›

Tomatoes should ideally be grown in a raised bed that's at least 15 to 18 inches deep. Many of my clients in Houston are successfully growing tomatoes in 12-inch deep raised garden beds, but their plants tend to be a little stunted compared to plants in deeper beds.

How deep should a raised garden bed be? ›

A raised bed does not need to be very deep to be effective, but the surface underneath your garden bed affects which depth is right. In general, eight inches is a good minimum depth for raised garden beds.

How many bags of soil do I need for a 4x8 raised bed? ›

For a 4x8-foot raised bed with a 6” height, using Mel's Mix: about 5 cubic feet each of compost, peat moss, and vermiculite is needed. It usually takes about two to three bags of purchased fertile mix (1.5 cubic feet each) to cover the bed surface to a depth of 2 inches.

What are three mistakes to avoid when gardening with raised beds? ›

What Are 3 Common Mistakes to Avoid When Gardening with Raised Beds?
  • Overcrowding Plants.
  • Using Poor Quality Soil.
  • Neglecting Watering and Drainage.
  • Conclusion.
Mar 11, 2023

Why put cardboard in raised beds? ›

The answer is yes. You can line the bottom of your raised garden bed with cardboard and newspaper to block out weeds or act as a barrier against rhizomatous, weedy or invasive plants. While some may opt for landscape fabric, cardboard is a more cost-effective option.

Do tomatoes like top soil or potting soil? ›

Tomatoes can thrive in pots as long as they are grown in high-quality potting soil and receive plenty of sun, water and fertilizer.

How many tomato plants can I plant in a 4x4 raised bed? ›

A 4ft. x 4ft. raised garden bed gives you 16 square feet of growing space (more if you add some trellises for vertical space). That means you can grow around 10 to 11 indeterminate, or vining, tomato plants in one raised bed—if you really love cherry tomatoes, that is.

How deep does a raised bed need to be for cucumbers? ›

Eighteen inches is the minimum height needed for plants like tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, zucchini, and kale—plants that have a bigger root base and need more nutrients and space to spread out.

What is the best bottom for a raised garden bed? ›

You Can Use a Layer of Cardboard at the Bottom of Raised Beds to Prevent Weeds. If your budget doesn't allow for weed barrier cloth, you can add several layers of cardboard to the bottom of your raised bed before filling it with soil. The cardboard will decompose in about 4 to 6 months.

How high off the ground should a raised garden bed be? ›

If the raised bed is on top of a hard surface, the minimum recommended height of 10 inches may not be deep enough for some crops, like potatoes. Young children need beds closer to the ground. For wheelchair access, beds should be 24 inches tall. A bed that is 36 inches off the ground helps avoid excessive bending over.

How big is too big for a raised garden bed? ›

The maximum width you would want for a raised bed is about four feet wide, and that would only be for beds that you're able to access from all four sides. Anything beyond four and a half to five feet typically makes plants in the middle of the bed too difficult to reach (unless you have very long arms).

How do you arrange plants in a raised bed? ›

There are two basic rules when arranging plants in the beds: 1) space the individual plants so that they touch each other when they reach their mature size, and 2) overlap the masses of plants and connect them so that they flow without space between them. Avoid gaps or large open areas between masses.

What is the most efficient garden layout? ›

Square foot gardening is an efficient and space-saving technique that involves dividing your garden into small, manageable squares. Each square is typically one foot by one foot and is planted with a specific number of plants depending on their size.

What is the best placement for a raised bed? ›

A north-south orientation is best for low-growing crops, allowing direct sunlight to reach both sides of the bed. For taller crops such as pole beans, peas and tomatoes an east west orientation works best. Leave enough space in between beds to easily maneuver around.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kareem Mueller DO

Last Updated:

Views: 5942

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kareem Mueller DO

Birthday: 1997-01-04

Address: Apt. 156 12935 Runolfsdottir Mission, Greenfort, MN 74384-6749

Phone: +16704982844747

Job: Corporate Administration Planner

Hobby: Mountain biking, Jewelry making, Stone skipping, Lacemaking, Knife making, Scrapbooking, Letterboxing

Introduction: My name is Kareem Mueller DO, I am a vivacious, super, thoughtful, excited, handsome, beautiful, combative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.