EXPLORE
Movato
  • Interior Design
    • Bathroom
    • Bedroom
    • Decor
    • Design Finds
    • Kitchen
    • Living Room
    • Paint
    • Renovations
  • Architecture
  • Landscape
  • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Places
    • Things
  • About Us
Movato
EXPLORE
Home in Canada
No Result
View All Result

The Perfect Potager

Raised beds for vegetables and herbs are both practical and beautiful in this garden

by Cheryl Cornacchia
July 23, 2020
Share on FacebookPin itTweet itSend it

Photography: Tatiana Povereny

The homeowner opted for a potager with raised container beds after several years of watching groundhogs devour the vegetables she grew. The garden boxes are 26 and 30 inches tall—just high enough to keep the critters out.

If there were ever a year to integrate a vegetable patch into one’s backyard, this year would be it.  A steady flow of fresh greens, herbs and other vegetables throughout the summer months can only be seen as a blessing in these COVID-19 days. A backyard garden created in Terrebonne, a suburb on the northeastern edge of the Montreal metropolitan region, is a perfect example of how a so-called kitchen garden (or potager, to use the French term) can be integrated into a modern garden in a stylish way. 

It just takes a little thinking outside the box, says Tatiana Povereny, a garden designer with Prestige Paysage, the Terrebonne-based landscape design company that executed the work.

Povereny says the property had been already tastefully developed with a built-in pool, pool house, pergola for outdoor dining, and borders planted with perennials and ornamental shrubs. The idea now was to do away with the yard’s old kitchen garden, which consisted of two 12-by-five-foot beds that had been set off on one side of the yard and consistently ravaged by groundhogs. They were replaced with a new potager around a new raised slab seating area, through a network of raised garden boxes and paths made of pavers and loose river rocks.

“We suggested to the client that we blend the two areas together,” says Povereny.

The new raised seating area is made of straight-edged, grey-coloured slabs (Permacon’s Melville plank pavers) and measures 16 by 18 feet. It is bordered on one side by a seven-foot-tall architectural cedar screen that runs the full width of the new patio. A long L-shaped bench was installed in front of the screen. The bench, along with a collection of lounge chairs, creates an intimate arrangement around a new concrete fire bowl from Dekko Concrete that emits 60,000 BTU of propane-fueled heat.

The new potager abuts two sides of the raised patio and consists of 12 garden boxes, each measuring 60-by-30 inches. The custom boxes are made of Corten steel from Acier Urbain Inc. and come with irrigation. They are grouped in twos and threes, and one row of five boxes. Half of the boxes stand 30 inches tall while the other half stand 36 inches tall, creating visual interest.

Is there a better place to relax with a cocktail? The 60,000-BTU propane fire bowl warms up a chilly evening and allows the homeowners to enjoy starry nights, both early and late in the summer season. 

Planted herbs, cherry tomatoes, mixed greens and other vegetables complete the scene. And because the planters are made of weathered steel, they warm up quickly in spring and stay warm later into fall, extending the growing season.

Povereny says she loves the way the project turned out—and so did the homeowner, who says: “I have to give her credit. She was courageous to go with the idea. It’s not something you see every day.” •

Originally published in the Summer 2020 issue.

Prestige Paysage
www.prestigepaysage.com
514-795-5557

Tags: Covid-19gardenmontrealpotagersummervegetable garden

Related Posts

Birds, Bees, Bats and Butterflies
garden

Birds, Bees, Bats and Butterflies

June 18, 2021

Colourful backyard plants have more advantages than just aesthetic appeal. They also foster a balanced ecosystem by attracting pollinators. According...

garden

Celebrate Spring by Creating Seed Bombs

May 22, 2021

It’s spring, so I’m celebrating by making seed bombs. A fun DIY activity for the whole family, creating seed bombs...

Architecture

Shedding New Light on Urban Development

January 17, 2021

An ambitious three-phase real estate development project called Quartier des Lumières has been awarded “Three Stars Fitwel Community” certification. It...

A Tale of Two Homes
Interior Design

A Tale of Two Homes

November 24, 2020

Photography: Drew HadleyStyling: Jean MonetFloral arrangements:Le Marché aux fleurs du village It was the best of times, it was the...

A Growing Business
garden

A Growing Business

October 13, 2020

Photography: Jean BlaisStyling: Jean Monet There is a popular misconception that people who make a living cultivating plants for the...

Community Spirit In A Residential Garden
Landscape

Community Spirit In A Residential Garden

October 8, 2020

Photography: Joshua Lawrence A rich mix of natural materials leads the eye to the home’s front door. Although designed pre-pandemic,...

Next Post
A Fresh Start

A Fresh Start

  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Issues
Made with ❤️ in Montréal

© 2020 Home in Canada

No Result
View All Result
  • Interior Design
    • Bathroom
    • Bedroom
    • Decor
    • Design Finds
    • Kitchen
    • Living Room
    • Paint
    • Renovations
  • Architecture
  • Landscape
  • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Places
    • Things
  • About Us

© 2020 Home in Canada