An Enclosed Alpine Sanctuary in Your Courtyard
Walled courtyards amplify the sculptural beauty of boulders and alpines, creating a private mountain landscape in miniature.
Why it works
Courtyards provide shelter that protects delicate alpines from wind and frost while the walls radiate stored heat, creating a warm microclimate. The enclosed geometry turns every boulder into a focal point — a single large stone in a courtyard has the presence of a sculpture in a gallery. Rock courtyards are ideal for Mediterranean or modern architecture where the clean lines of stone and gravel complement built surfaces.
How to achieve this look
Cover the courtyard floor with compacted decomposed granite in a warm honey or silver-grey tone. Position a single statement boulder or a group of three as the centerpiece. Plant pockets around stones with sempervivums, sedums, and woolly thyme. Add vertical interest with a potted dwarf pine or juniper. Use Corten steel or stone troughs for additional alpine planting along walls. Keep the palette restrained — the beauty is in the contrast between hard stone and delicate plant life.
Arden shows how different boulder sizes and gravel tones will fill your courtyard proportions. Test a single dramatic stone versus a cluster, and preview how alpine planting softens the composition.
"I redesigned my entire backyard before buying a single plant. Saved me from so many mistakes."
-- Sarah M.
Часто задаваемые вопросы
Q1 Will a rock courtyard feel too stark?
Not if you include enough plant life. Sempervivums and creeping thyme soften stone beautifully. A single potted tree adds life and scale. The enclosure of courtyard walls creates intimacy that open spaces lack.
Q2 What gravel works best for a rock courtyard?
Decomposed granite or angular crushed stone in 6–10mm size. Match the tone to your walls — warm honey for sandstone, cool grey for concrete or render.
Q3 How do I maintain a rock courtyard garden?
Sweep gravel occasionally, remove fallen leaves, and trim dead growth from alpines in spring. That is essentially the full maintenance program — perhaps 30 minutes per month.