Build a Rain Garden That Works
Turn stormwater runoff into a landscape asset — design a rain garden that filters water, supports wildlife, and blooms beautifully.
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Why it works
Rain gardens are shallow, planted depressions designed to capture and filter stormwater runoff from roofs, driveways, and lawns. As urbanization replaces permeable ground with hard surfaces, stormwater rushes into storm drains carrying pollutants — oil, fertilizer, pesticides, and sediment — directly into rivers, lakes, and coastal waters. A single rain garden can filter up to 30,000 gallons of water per year, removing up to 90% of nutrients and chemicals and 80% of sediments before water reaches groundwater or streams. Beyond their environmental function, rain gardens are beautiful — they host moisture-tolerant native plants that attract pollinators and birds, creating a vibrant pocket of habitat. Many municipalities now offer rebates or incentives for residential rain gardens, making them a win for your landscape, the environment, and your wallet.
How to Create This Garden
- 1
Identify where roof runoff or driveway water naturally flows and site the garden in that drainage path.
- 2
Dig a shallow bowl 6–12 inches deep with gently sloped sides and a flat bottom.
- 3
Amend the bottom with a 50/50 mix of sand and compost to improve infiltration rate.
- 4
Plant moisture-tolerant natives in the center and drought-tolerant species on the raised edges.
- 5
Direct downspout water to the garden via a gravel channel and add a berm on the downhill side for overflow control.
Arden lets you visualize how a rain garden will integrate into your landscape. See how the planted basin will look from your windows, your driveway, or your front walk — and plan the shape and plant palette before any digging begins.
"I redesigned my entire backyard before buying a single plant. Saved me from so many mistakes."
-- Sarah M.
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न
Q1 Will a rain garden attract mosquitoes?
No, if designed properly. Rain gardens are engineered to drain within 24–48 hours — mosquitoes need 7+ days of standing water to breed. If water lingers, the drainage mix needs amendment. A functioning rain garden actually reduces mosquito habitat by eliminating puddles.
Q2 How big should my rain garden be?
A general rule is 20–30% of the impervious area draining into it. For a typical 1,000-square-foot roof section, a rain garden of 200–300 square feet works well. Even a small 50-square-foot rain garden captures significant runoff and makes a difference.
Q3 Can I build a rain garden in clay soil?
Yes, but you need to dig deeper (12–18 inches) and replace the native clay with a sand-compost-topsoil mix that drains freely. In severe clay, add a perforated underdrain pipe connected to the storm system as a safety overflow.
Q4 Do rain gardens need maintenance?
Minimal. Weed monthly during the first year while plants establish. After that, cut back perennials in late winter, refresh mulch annually, and remove any sediment buildup at the inlet. Once established, rain gardens are among the lowest-maintenance garden features.