Go Vertical and Multiply Your Garden Space

Living walls, green screens, and climbing plants turn fences and walls into productive garden surfaces without sacrificing floor space.

Why it works

Vertical gardening multiplies growing space by using walls, fences, and structures that are already there. A 20-foot fence panel offers 100+ square feet of growing surface that costs nothing in ground space. Living walls insulate buildings, absorb sound, filter air, and create dramatic visual impact. Vertical gardens are particularly valuable in small backyards where every square foot of ground is contested between seating, circulation, and planting.

How to achieve this look

Choose your system based on budget and ambition. Simple: train climbing plants (jasmine, clematis, climbing roses) on wire or trellis attached to existing walls and fences. Medium: install modular green wall panels (felt pocket systems or modular plastic cells) with automatic irrigation. Advanced: build a full living wall with an integrated drip system, growing medium, and a plant palette of ferns, heucheras, and sedums. Start with the sunniest wall for flowering climbers and the shadiest for fern-based living walls. Add climbing edibles — espaliered fruit trees, grape vines, passion fruit — for productive vertical planting.

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Arden shows how living walls, trellis systems, and climbing plants will transform your backyard walls and fences. Preview different coverage levels and plant palettes to find the vertical garden that maximizes your space.

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Najczęściej zadawane pytania

Q1 Will climbing plants damage my wall?

Self-clinging climbers (ivy, Virginia creeper) can damage render and mortar. Use wire or trellis systems that hold plants away from the wall surface. Trellis-trained climbers add no structural risk and can be removed easily.

Q2 How do you water a living wall?

Most living wall systems include integrated drip irrigation that runs from top to bottom. Water flows through the growing medium by gravity. Manual systems need watering 2–3 times per week in summer.

Q3 What plants work best for vertical gardens?

For living walls: ferns, heucheras, sedums, small grasses, and trailing plants. For trellis: jasmine, clematis, climbing roses, and wisteria. For edible vertical gardens: espaliered fruit, grape vines, and climbing beans.

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