Modern Minimalism in a Narrow Side Yard
A single material, a single plant species, and a clean path turn a forgettable side yard into a gallery-worthy corridor.
Why it works
Side yards are narrow and linear — conditions that expose cluttered design but reward minimalism. A modern minimal approach treats the side yard like a gallery corridor: one material on the floor, one plant species repeated in rhythm. There is no room for visual noise in a 4-foot-wide space.
How to achieve this look
Pave with large-format porcelain tiles in a single neutral tone. Set a line of Corten steel planters along one wall, each planted with the same species — agave, black bamboo, or boxball. Leave the opposite wall bare. Install recessed LED strip lighting along the planter base.
Arden shows how a single repeated element transforms a chaotic side yard into a modern gallery corridor.
"I redesigned my entire backyard before buying a single plant. Saved me from so many mistakes."
-- Sarah M.
よくある質問
Q1 Is one plant species enough for a side yard?
In modern minimalism, one species repeated is more powerful than ten mixed.
Q2 What width works for a modern minimal side yard?
Even 3 feet is enough for a paved path and a single line of planters.
Q3 How do I add lighting to a narrow side yard?
Recessed ground uplights or LED strip lighting along planter bases are the most effective.