Architectural Design

Our goal is to create a transformation of spaces that promotes relaxation, well-being and better living outdoors. In order to achieve this goal, we consider all factors that are involved in a well-designed landscape and address various problems within it.

We personalize the design to the individual lifestyle, goals, needs, tastes, and budget of those who intend to live in the outdoor space. We apply a vast scope of horticultural and design knowledge and techniques in order to perfect the outdoor spaces. We see inspiration, creativity and sensitivity as key elements to achieving an inspiring and unique landscape that reflects the beauty and charm of your space. 

Like in the case of an artist who has a canvas and paints, a good place to start the creative process is to decide what it is you’d like to express. What type of garden expresses you?

Here is a free download that will help you figure it out and get you on track with your decision making and plans.

GRAB A FREE DOWNLOAD.

We look forward to the privilege of working with you through this creative process.

De-Clutter Your Garden

Have an overgrown, over crowded garden that is no longer functioning as the vibrant and balanced landscape that your property has once seen? 

We love pruning, clearing and restoring youth, proportion and function to landscapes. 

We will de-clutter your gardens, free up space, restore walkways and make the existing planting materials work for the appeal of your home. 

It will be our joy to make a difference in your property and make your space bring to you the joy and happiness that it should.

We will remove the debris and leave your garden immaculately clean and beautiful.

Pollinator Gardens

There is nothing like seeing happy butterflies dancing up and down and all around with joy, native bees clinging to flowers, loving life and beautiful moths and hummingbirds finding your garden to be their treasure. These make a true celebration of life, what a happy summer sight!

Pollinator gardens are a great way to add interest and diversity to your home and the city landscape. These gardens are designed to attract bees, butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, bats, and even hummingbirds. 

Why would you want these visitors in your backyard? These animals perform the crucial ecosystem service of pollination–making it possible for our food and flowers to grow! However, many bees and butterflies are habitat-specific, and the loss of habitat that provides sites for overwintering, foraging, for pollen and nectar, or nesting can be detrimental to these species.

Urban spaces like your own yard can be used to bring nature back. When planted with specific native species that attract pollinators and on which they depend, they can provide corridors that connect wildlife habitats. This means that they have somewhere to stop and refuel as they travel through urban spaces on their way to larger sites of refuge. Urban yards can allow declining species to restore their populations, survive and thrive. 

Turning your lawn or backyard into a pollinator-friendly area is a great way not only to help bring pollinators back to urban areas, but also to save time and money and decrease your negative impact on the environment. Native plants are very self reliant and most are drought tolerant with very low demands, if any. 

Five years ago, we started our own pollinator garden which is where we experiment with many native perennials and shrubs. We examine their behavior, needs, habits, size and contribution to the garden. Based on our observations we can recommend the right plant for any sight and use them to achieve our design goals. 

If you too love to watch nature from your window, see butterflies and birds of all kinds enjoy your gardens, let us know and we can create an attractive garden, a piece of Eden right outside your door.

Urban Food Forest

We hope you intend on having a garden that you long to lay your eyes on, receive its energy when you walk through it and sense its vigor. A garden that looks interesting as it changes throughout the seasons and offers new combinations and beauty. These are all goals that should guide a garden design. But, can there be any more treasures hidden in a garden? 

What about if year after year you can walk through its paths and forage perennial fruits that no longer require any inputs except for occasional pruning perhaps. All you really need is a bowl in hand or some freezer bags to keep your harvest, which is a nutritional bonus for your health and taste buds, it supplies you with vitamins, minerals and plenty antioxidants and gives you opportunity to supplement your food. 

You can wake up in the morning, stretch and head out to forage your breakfast, snacks and even dinner: Asparagus, strawberries, French Sorrel and chives through the month of June, various raspberries, juicy sweet gooseberries, currants, cherries, blueberries and abundance of tasty serviceberries in July. Elderberries, plums, apricots and peaches in august. Seaberries, apples and pears in September. Persimmons and pawpaws in October. Garlic chives, tarragon, Thyme and oregano cover the ground in abundance and rhubarb reliably provides fresh red stalks for your springtime pies. 

Companion plants work hard in various ways to feed the soil for your food producing plants and deter insects away from them. Some, by their flowers, draw pollinators to pollinate the forest garden and transform flowers into fruit. 

Planting beds for annual crops thrive among the trees and shrubs and grow every goodness your heart desires. 

In the evening, shortly before the sun goes down, as hot summer days have cooled, you head out into your forest garden one more time for some forest immersion. You see how moist and lush it is after a storm and you admire your trees growth. One more taste of berries or a bowl for an after-supper snack, some herbal leaves for tea and you bid your forest farewell for the night. 

You have space for a garden? Why not plant a garden that you can eat? Is growing a climbing perennial on a pergola or an arbour in your plan? Why not plant a fruiting vine such as grapes or hardy kiwi? There are hardy kiwi vines of great ornamental value as well. Why not incorporate a serviceberry shrub into your foundation planting, which gives a beautiful display of flowers in spring, abundance of red to deep purple berries in summer and brilliant orange and red foliage in the fall? 

We have accumulated experience with growing an urban back yard forest garden in the Niagara Region and will be happy to draw from our experience with food crops and landscape design to create for you a food forest garden that is beautiful, resilient, and full of abundance and will change the way you experience nature at home and nourish your family. 

Resilience, plant health, human health and environmental health are all highlighted in this type of garden. If this speaks to you, contact us and we can discuss different ways to get this garden going. 

Interested customers can tour our own food forest to get ideas and perspective.