Hi @calphoenix
Thanks for this interesting question on design. It doesn't breach the design or forum rules as they are so specific. More people cheekily ask me to design their gardens for free, and these get banned!
I've seen many living structures and collums on my journey as a garden designer, mainly in very humid countries like Singapore and Asia.
The advice I would give you is a lot of these are not structural. They are basically big mesh pillars filled with coir and other growing media, with creeping and climbing plants planted in pockets around them to give the illusion of a plant pillar.
For your project, I'd advise two things to bear in mind:
1 - Planting around the pillars will require drainage and some decent soil. So you will probably need to either cut a ring out of the flags all the way around, add a colour, and then fill it with some decent soil/compost. Then plant climbers. You will need decent drainage, though!
2 - Maintenance of climbing plants like Ivy. Whilst Ivy and large-leaf Hederas are probably the best for coverage, they can become unwieldy. How will the owners manage to stop it from creeping up and into the guttering or smothering the railing? Bear that in mind.
A better idea would be to design some circular, deeper planters around the base, like a big collar, and fill them with a mix of tall herbaceous perennials and evergreen plants. Maybe a few dwarf clematis will help you get some of the impact without the maintenance.
Do let us know how you get on, and if you want to advance your garden design skills, why not consider taking my online course?
All the best
Lee
Hi @calphoenix
Thanks for this interesting question on design. It doesn't breach the design or forum rules as they are so specific. More people cheekily ask me to design their gardens for free, and these get banned!
I've seen many living structures and collums on my journey as a garden designer, mainly in very humid countries like Singapore and Asia.
The advice I would give you is a lot of these are not structural. They are basically big mesh pillars filled with coir and other growing media, with creeping and climbing plants planted in pockets around them to give the illusion of a plant pillar.
For your project, I'd advise two things to bear in mind:
1 - Planting around the pillars will require drainage and some decent soil. So you will probably need to either cut a ring out of the flags all the way around, add a colour, and then fill it with some decent soil/compost. Then plant climbers. You will need decent drainage, though!
2 - Maintenance of climbing plants like Ivy. Whilst Ivy and large-leaf Hederas are probably the best for coverage, they can become unwieldy. How will the owners manage to stop it from creeping up and into the guttering or smothering the railing? Bear that in mind.
A better idea would be to design some circular, deeper planters around the base, like a big collar, and fill them with a mix of tall herbaceous perennials and evergreen plants. Maybe a few dwarf clematis will help you get some of the impact without the maintenance.
Do let us know how you get on, and if you want to advance your garden design skills, why not consider taking my online course?
All the best
Lee