Go Green Without Losing Floor Space
Vertical planters, pocket systems, and trellis panels turn your balcony wall into a lush garden without using a single square foot of floor.
Why it works
Balconies have limited floor space but often substantial wall area. A vertical garden system on the back wall or side panels converts that blank surface into a green oasis. Pocket planters, modular panels, and trellis with climbers add plants without competing with furniture, foot traffic, or drying laundry. The visual impact is outsized — a green wall transforms a concrete balcony into a garden retreat.
How to achieve this look
Mount a felt pocket planter system on the back wall — each pocket holds a 4-inch plant. Fill with trailing herbs (thyme, oregano), ferns, and small ornamentals. Add a trellis panel on one side with a compact clematis or jasmine. Hang a few macramé planters from the ceiling for trailing pothos or string of pearls. Keep the floor clear for a small table and chair. Use lightweight, draining growing media and install a simple drip system or water by hand with a narrow-spout can. Solar-powered LEDs along the vertical garden extend the green ambiance into evening.
Arden visualizes how a vertical garden system will look on your specific balcony walls. Preview pocket planters, trellis panels, and hanging displays to design a green wall that transforms your balcony.
"Finally an app that understands outdoor spaces. Every garden plan turned out beautiful."
-- Priya K.
Câu Hỏi Thường Gặp
Q1 How heavy is a vertical garden system?
A fully planted and watered felt pocket system weighs approximately 5–8 lbs per square foot. Modular plastic systems are lighter. Check that your wall can support the load — mount into studs or masonry, never just into drywall.
Q2 Will a vertical garden drip water?
Some dripping is normal. Install a drip tray or gutter at the base of the system. Self-contained modular systems with built-in reservoirs reduce dripping significantly.
Q3 What plants survive in balcony vertical gardens?
Hardy options: pothos, ferns, spider plants, trailing succulents, herbs (thyme, oregano, parsley), and small ornamental grasses. Choose plants matched to your balcony sun exposure — full sun gets different species than shade.