Effectively blending outdoors and indoors in your garden can make a big difference when it comes to how much you actually use the space. If you are lucky enough to have a garden, then it can become an extremely useful extension to you home. And your home can feel more connected with the outside space.
But how can you blur the boundaries and create a cohesive home that includes both your outdoors and indoors space? In this article, we’ll talk about blending outdoors and indoors in your garden. And how the decisions you make can make both outside and undercover areas more interconnected. This is important. It can make a big difference to liveability in all your spaces. So read on to think about and examine this issue a little more.
Blending Outdoors and Indoors With Undercover Growing Areas
In a garden, undercover growing areas such as greenhouses or polytunnels can be used to create areas that are neither fully outdoors, nor part of the inside of your home. While it may be more usual to position these sorts of structures at some distance from your back door into you garden – in certain situations these undercover areas may even adjoin a rear entrance. You might even pass through such a structure to reach the outside garden in a south-facing location.
Even where this is not sensible not feasible, it might be possible to create a covered or partially covered walkway to lead you from your back door and into this space. For example, a pergola might wrap around the corner of a site, linking the door to the home with the door to a polytunnel or greenhouse – forming a comfortable way to reach the growing area. And blending the boundary between the two.
When you have easier access from the home into an undercover growing area, this can make it easier to tend it. And it can also help the areas to feel more connected.
Blending Outdoors and Indoors With Outdoors Seating Areas
Creating a seating area outside the back door or doors of your home can also help the garden feel more connected to the rest of your home. This might be a covered or partially covered area. Or it might be entirely open to the elements. Either way, it should be a space that links indoors and outdoors and helps you to feel that you can spend plenty of time outdoors enjoying your garden throughout as much of the year as possible.
Remember, however, that a seating area might be positioned further from the door or doors into your garden. Where exactly you place a seating area will depend on sunlight and shade, and other environmental conditions and views.
If a seating area is placed, for example, at the far end of your garden, it is important to think about how you will reach it. The pathways that lead from a home to a seating area are a key feature of garden design. Think about the journey travelled across a space. And how the path can be designed to lead the eye, and the feet, seamlessly between the home and the outdoors seating area.
Blending Outdoors and Indoors With Garden Rooms
Remember, outdoors areas of your garden can feel connected to the indoors without actually being visible from the back door or doors. Sometimes, creating an effective garden design can be as much about what we do not see immediately as what we do. Creating a series of outdoors garden rooms can help your garden live up to its full potential, and help it to feel more at one with the inside spaces you enjoy.
Creating garden rooms is often about creating boundaries (with plants or man-made structures) between different zones. The different garden rooms can have very different atmospheres. And be designated for different functions. Creating a series of ‘rooms’ leading out from your home can help your garden feel more integrated with your home. There could be rooms for food production closest to the kitchen, seating areas and recreational spaces. And perhaps wilder and less frequently visited zones for wildlife further away.
Think about how hedges, borders, fences, walls, or polytunnels or greenhouses might be positioned to create boundaries between different areas. The view of the next ‘room’ might be obscured, or partially screened from view. So you can go on a gradual journey from indoors to ‘wild’ rather than taking the whole view in at the same time.
Thinking About Food Related Pathways and Outdoors Cooking and Dining
Another way to blend indoors and outside areas in your garden is to think about how you can streamline the pathways taken by food you grow from soil to plate. By making it easier for you to garden and grow your own, then wash, prepare, cook and eat food, you can help the whole system, indoors and out, feel more connected.
One thing to think about, for example, is creating a washing station where you can clean off homegrown veggies. This should be somewhere along the pathway you take between your kitchen, and kitchen garden areas, and can help indoors and outdoors feel like they have a more integrated design.
Of course, the food you grow might not reach your indoors kitchen at all. You might have an outdoors kitchen area, with a barbecue, pizza oven or other outdoors cooking station. And a countertop area where fresh food can be washed and prepared.
And you might also have a place, between your kitchen and garden growing areas, perhaps, where you can enjoy dining outdoors. It might be open to the elements for al fresco dining in summer, or be a covered space.
Thinking about the pathways food takes around your garden and perhaps into your home can help you make spaces that feel more blended and harmonious, as well as being more practical day to day.
Blending Outdoors and Indoors With Plant and Materials Choices
Pathways and practicalities are only ever going to be part of the picture. When it comes to blending outdoors and indoors you also need to think about the cohesion and blurred boundaries that can come from other things.
Your plant choices and how you position plants are obviously important factors. For example, you might have indoors houseplants that ‘speak to’ plants positioned outdoors. These might be plants which complement one other and feel like they are part of the same scheme. Plants outdoors might feel like they lead the eye from the home to the far reaches of the space. And ‘borrow’ from the landscape beyond so your garden feels bigger than it actually is.
Materials choices for decking, patios or other man-made garden features can also be chosen. To reflect or complement materials inside the home. And this can also help make inside and outside spaces feel more connected.
Of course, these are just a few tips to consider. There are plenty of ways that you can implement small ‘tricks’ and clever design. Blending outdoors and indoors is important. And when you bear in mind the above, it can be easier than you might think.
Do you have your own tips or suggestions to share? We’d love you to share them in the comments section below.
Elizabeth Waddington is a writer and green living consultant living in Scotland. Permaculture and sustainability are at the heart of everything she does, from designing gardens and farms around the world, to inspiring and facilitating positive change for small companies and individuals.
She also works on her own property, where she grows fruit and vegetables, keeps chickens and is working on the eco-renovation of an old stone barn.
To get in touch, visit https://ewspconsultancy.com.