A Secret Cottage Garden in Your Courtyard
Walled courtyards were made for cottage gardens — climbing roses on every surface, pots overflowing with flowers, and joyful, fragrant abundance.
Why it works
The cottage garden and the walled courtyard were literally born together in medieval England. The enclosure creates a sheltered microclimate where tender perennials and climbing roses flourish. The walls provide vertical surfaces for climbers, tripling your planting area. A courtyard cottage garden feels like stepping into a secret garden.
How to achieve this look
Train climbing roses on wires along every wall. Fill beds with a layered cottage mix: tall delphiniums and hollyhocks at the back, roses and peonies in the middle, lady mantle and catmint at the front. Place weathered terracotta pots. Install a central fountain, birdbath, or sundial.
Arden transforms your courtyard into a blooming cottage garden sanctuary. See how climbing roses cover the walls and how a central fountain completes the atmosphere.
"Finally an app that understands outdoor spaces. Every garden plan turned out beautiful."
-- Priya K.
Questions Fréquentes
Q1 Can a cottage courtyard garden work in shade?
Yes. Use foxglove, hellebore, bleeding heart, ferns, and climbing hydrangea instead of roses.
Q2 How do I prevent a cottage courtyard from feeling crowded?
Keep a clear central path or open patio area. Let plants overflow the edges but maintain one open space.
Q3 What maintenance does a cottage courtyard need?
Deadhead roses weekly, feed perennials monthly, and cut back in late autumn.